United States Military Academy—West Point
606 Building, West Point, NY
Admissions Phone: (845) 938-4041
Website:
http://www.usma.edu
Inside the Classroom
The "West Point Experience"" lasts about ten years: one
devoted to the application process, four in the academy, and five
in military service. The top-notch education is free, but the
military obligation, the strict admissions standards, and the
rigorous academic, physical, and mental requirements can all make
you forget you're going for free in a hurry. Most cadets at West
Point didn't go there for the free education. As one cadet said,
"I'm at West Point because I always wanted to go to West
Point."
Because USMA is devoted to training cadets to serve as
officers, it is highly selective in its admissions standards. An
applicant must be nominated by a member of Congress or by the
Department of the Army; children of a parent who has received the
Congressional Medal of Honor are also eligible. There are
rigorous academic requirements—SAT/ACT scores are quite high—and
extensive physical testing.
Life as a cadet involves studying, exercising, and plenty of
drilling, with little time for anything else. The academic
workload is strenuous, and consists of a core of 31 courses in
the arts and sciences, with a required sequence of engineering
classes. About 75 percent of cadets select one of 22 majors, and
follow a structured series of "electives" in their discipline
("you pick the major, the military will pick your electives").
West Point's engineering programs are "the best in the U.S.,"
according to an Alabama guidance counselor, and programs in
natural sciences, political science, history, and government are
quite strong.
Classes at West Point are small, usually less than 18, and the
faculty/student ratio is 1:8. Cadets rave about the attentiveness
of the faculty, which include both senior commissioned officers
with Ph.D.'s and civilian professors. Cadets receive a bachelor
of science degree, and earn a commission as a second lieutenant
upon completion. West Point ranks in the top four in both Rhodes
and Hertz Scholarships.
Cadets learn basic military skills, including leadership,
through a demanding military program which begins on their first
day. Most military training takes place during the summer, with
new cadets undergoing Cadet Basic Training (fondly nicknamed
"Beast Barracks"), the same basic training that soldiers get in
boot camp. The grueling basic is followed the next summer by
field training. Cadets spend their third and fourth summers
serving in active Army units around the world; attending advanced
training courses such as airborne, air assault, or northern
warfare; or training the first- and second-year cadets. Military
training is combined with military science instruction and a
thorough grounding in the West Point ethical code, stated in the
Academy's motto, "Duty, Honor, Country."
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