Congrats!! good for you. Way to makethe most of your time in service adn the benefits you've earned!
I wish all my sailors were as smart and proactive as you. How did you get your bachelors? TAP? I have some junior corpsman working with me that are in similar situations and I'm trying to counsel them about the best way to navigate the system.
BS: Clinical Laboratory Science-The George Washington University
My pathway:
Joined in 2001-enlisted
MLT-C school: Advanced laboratory technician school: GWU
finished BS: GWU
As a lab tech, I only got deployed once to Iraq and no ship time. Spent rest of time on land in and out of clinics or hospitals. (Plenty of time for school)
It was very hard trying to schedule pre-req science classes around my schedule even though I was on land because of low/high priority checkoffs with POMI. A bit of luck came my way with only 1 deployment and as a FMF corpsman/lab tech.
I was all for military medicine until I got to my current command. The chain of command was a joke and very disrespectful. When I started this process months ago and feared that I needed a 1306, my COC started putting up hurdles for me, like healthstream courses. (WTF) They dragged their bottoms in getting my paper work and showed me no respect while doing so. Even though I was one of the harder working lab techs, my LPO told me that i was easily replaceable. I know that that may be true, but you don't have to say it like that. Just 1 week ago, I got into a heated debate over the holiday schedule. Even though I was scheduled to work every single weekend this year with 2 holidays of duty, I was told that I must also work Thanksgiving, christmas, and New Year's eve becasue I was leaving in March and they wanted to get as much out of me as they could before they leave. There was no duty schedule or anything, the reason was "just because!" She also went on to tell me that I was not all that beacause I'm applying to med school and should slow my roll.
😡
My advice to you friend: Sounds like you are awesome so far. You seem proactive in your junior troops career path and they need that. My pathologist were not that interested in enlisted career paths and remainedin their offices with their scopes. (with the exception of 3) I had to get support from other doc in other departments like Hem/OC. You seem to be honest about pros and cons of military medicine and people need to hear that. I have encountered many mad mil docs that feel that they got "screwed" becasue they did not know "all" the pros and cons besides a free ride + pay while in school.
To be honest, I was on the fence. If it was not for the new GI bill +this low-cost school (MCG), I would have gone to USUHS or at least used HPSP. Thanks for your reply!
PS: Tell your troops that the MCAT should not be taken lightly. This test does not test smarts. To trick to scoring >35 on this test is to not work and study 5-6h hrs each day for 4-5 months. We military folks don't have that luxury, so they need to study for a few extra months with a course like kaplan in between. Also, tell them that it is not a race. the easiest way to fail is to take on too much. Working 45-50 hrs a week on top of 2 science classes may be very challenging. Take it slow and develop constant study habits. Good luck!