Mar 28, 2024  
2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps


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Col. Patrick H. Donley, Ph.D., Department Head
Phone: (434) 924-6831
Email: afrotc@virginia.edu
Fax: (434) 982-2842
Location: AFROTC Detachment 890
University of Virginia
P.O. Box 400188
Charlottesville, VA 22904-4188
Website: http://www.virginia.edu/afrotc

Professor
Col. P. Donley, Ph.D.
Associate Professors
D. Brown, C. Delawder, C. Ulman

Mission Statement

The Air Force ROTC program is designed to recruit, educate and commission officer candidates through college campus programs based on Air Force requirements. Units are located at 145 college and university campuses throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. Students from schools near Air Force ROTC host institutions can attend classes through 1025 separate crosstown enrollment programs or consortium agreements.

Goals

The Air Force Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (AFROTC) at James Madison University is established under a cross-town agreement with the University of Virginia. JMU students will take AFROTC classes at the University of Virginia for JMU credit. AFROTC provides a program of leadership development that prepares college men and women for service as commissioned officers in the United States Air Force. After graduation, they assume active duty positions in both flying and non-flying specialties. To accomplish this, the Department of Air Science recruits, selects, retains and commissions officer candidates as second lieutenants in the United States Air Force. AFROTC:

  • Provides ethics and values education, stressing the Air Force core values of integrity first, service before self and excellence in all we do.
  • Prepares cadets to be commissioned as second lieutenants through a curriculum that develops leadership and management skills and provides opportunities to use these skills in a variety of practical applications.
  • Provides an understanding of how to lead and influence small organizations, with a strong emphasis on personal integrity, honor and individual responsibility. The techniques of effective leadership and quality management are stressed to achieve mission accomplishment.
  • Enhances the cadets’ understanding of the role of the military in society and provides an in-depth orientation to history and tradition of the Air Force and how the Air Force serves the nation. This goal is reinforced by summer hands-on leadership training and career orientation opportunities at Air Force bases around the country.
  • Provides programs and experiences that increase self-confidence, self-discipline, accountability, physical stamina, poise and other traits essential to the development of a leader of character who is prepared to serve the nation in and out of uniform.

The curriculum and leader development programs of the Department of Air Science are mentally and physically challenging. Cadets learn basic military skills and participate in physical conditioning program starting in the first year. The program moves progressively from followership to leadership experiences and culminates with the fourth-year class cadets planning, organizing and administering all leadership training for the cadet wing. On-campus instruction is conducted both in the classroom by Air Force officers and in the field environment by both officer and cadet leaders. A demanding summer field training encampment prior to the junior year prepares the cadet for acceptance into the commissioning track.

Air Force ROTC offers four-, three- and two-year tracks. Four- and three-year track cadets must complete four credits of AFROTC academics prior to a four-week summer encampment. The three-year track cadets must complete both first and second year academic courses during their first year in ROTC. Students who have Junior ROTC, other-service ROTC, national guard, reserve or active duty military experience may request credit and advanced placement.

Unless the student earns an AFROTC scholarship, there is no service obligation inside the first two years of the four year program. However, all students who enter into the Professional Officer Course (the last two years) enter into a contractual obligation with the Air Force to serve on active duty upon commissioning.

After graduation and commissioning as second lieutenants in the Air Force, graduates serve in any number of career fields for a four-year active duty service commitment. Interested and qualified students may compete to become Air Force pilots, combat systems officers (CSO), air battle managers (ABM) or remotely piloted aircraft pilots (RPA). Successful pilot candidates serve a 10 year active duty service commitment, and CSO, ABM or RPA candidates incur a six year active duty service commitment after completion of career field training.

Co-curricular Activities and Organizations

  • Arnold Air Society
  • Drill Team

Special Admission and Retention Requirements

The Professional Officer Course is normally taken during the junior and senior years. Qualified students pursuing a commission as a second lieutenant are contracted and paid a subsistence allowance of $300-$500 per month. Cadets must maintain at least a 2.5 GPA, meet DoD medical fitness standards and meet Air Force physical fitness and weight control standards.

AFROTC Scholarships

Merit-based financial scholarships may be offered to highly academically competitive and qualified students already enrolled in the program. Awardees may be offered an AFROTC scholarship for full or partial college tuition, incidental fees and textbook allowances and a monthly subsistence allowance of $300-$500 depending on academic year. Scholarship students incur a military obligation after their first year.

 

Degree Requirements


The Leadership Laboratory (LLab) course taken during the first year is a weekly laboratory that touches on the topics of Air Force customs and courtesies, health and physical fitness, and drill and ceremonies. The second year LLab course provides students with the opportunity to demonstrate fundamental management skills and prepares them for Field Training. The third year LLab course provides the opportunity to develop fundamental management skills while planning and conducting cadet activities. Finally, the fourth year LLab course provides the opportunity to use leadership skills in planning and conducting cadet activities. It prepares students for commissioning and entry into the active-duty Air Force.

The air science curriculum is divided into two phases:

Total: 4 Credit Hours


Total: 12 Credit Hours


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