Hello everyone. I've got some more questions I'd appreciate some help with. I've been looking into joining the Marines (as an officer) through various routes from the Platoon Leader's Course to the Officer Candidate's Course to the NROTC doing research on my own. I talked to a recruiter and let him know I was interested in a 4 year degree (by itself) and a commission through the Platoon Leader's Course (during/after). He referred me to alternate routes through the NROTC or by joining the reserves. After a long conversation about different specialties I gave him my information, he gave me his card, and we parted ways. He didn't offer to sell me any bridges, and seemed quite honest and informative which really prompted me to renew my inquiries. Now for the questions:
What in your mind is the most logical way to go? Should I attempt to take my courses on scholarships and student loans, finish school, and attend OCC? Take the Juniors/Seniors program while in college? Should I join the reserves, continue through school and join through NROTC or the PLC with some financial aide from the Marines? Does anyone have firsthand experience? Pros/Cons?
What is the process like when you are becoming an officer, or actively seek a commission? I've read the process from an Army Officer's perspective, but I'd like any information anyone can provide. Any horror stories?
Does anyone have more information on the reserves, or attaining a commission through the reserves? Transferring out of the reserves? This is probably the area I know the least about.
I'm sure I will periodically update my question list and I thank anyone who answers/attempts to help in any way. While I don't quite feel overwhelmed by the information having extra analysis always helps a ton. I have a couple other considerations: I want to be on active duty, I want to specialize in Intelligence (MOS 0203 most preferably), I don't want a desk job (funny, I know), and the degree I'm pursuing is in science (if it matters - I know its a more competitive field for the NROTC). If for some reason becoming an officer doesn't pan out I have absolutely no reservations about enlisting, and I will still pursue the same 4 year degree.
Thanks for taking the time to read/consider this.
What in your mind is the most logical way to go? Should I attempt to take my courses on scholarships and student loans, finish school, and attend OCC? Take the Juniors/Seniors program while in college? Should I join the reserves, continue through school and join through NROTC or the PLC with some financial aide from the Marines? Does anyone have firsthand experience? Pros/Cons?
What is the process like when you are becoming an officer, or actively seek a commission? I've read the process from an Army Officer's perspective, but I'd like any information anyone can provide. Any horror stories?
Does anyone have more information on the reserves, or attaining a commission through the reserves? Transferring out of the reserves? This is probably the area I know the least about.
I'm sure I will periodically update my question list and I thank anyone who answers/attempts to help in any way. While I don't quite feel overwhelmed by the information having extra analysis always helps a ton. I have a couple other considerations: I want to be on active duty, I want to specialize in Intelligence (MOS 0203 most preferably), I don't want a desk job (funny, I know), and the degree I'm pursuing is in science (if it matters - I know its a more competitive field for the NROTC). If for some reason becoming an officer doesn't pan out I have absolutely no reservations about enlisting, and I will still pursue the same 4 year degree.
Thanks for taking the time to read/consider this.


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