Thursday, February 2, 2012

How does it work with the military paying for school?

I am doing prerequisites for nursing and I want to ultimately become a Nurse anesthetist. How can the military help me with tuition and training? I want to avoid debt. What will they pay for? What am I committed to do for them in return.How does it work with the military paying for school?Depends you can go to school now join the ROTC and rack up the debt then sign up for the military. They in turn will pay off you student loans. OR

You can go into the military and get the GI Bill and have a fixed amount to pay for your school.How does it work with the military paying for school?
they give u a G I Bill to pay 4 tuitionHow does it work with the military paying for school?They will only pay after you have been in a few years so don't go in just for the education they own you first and then what you want only matters after they made you into a machine.
Go to your local recruiting office.



They'll tell you all about your commitment obligations, what they'll pay for, etc.



I enlisted and spent 5 years in, got the GI Bill and am going to school...



My cousin went in and went to medical school first, then started work with the Air Force... it's like this, they'll pay for you to go to school, but you'll have to join up and "work it off" so to speak... depends on what you do and how long it takes and obviously how much it'll cost them.



Look into specialty jobs... and don't *trust* the recruiter... make sure you look into EVERYTHING before you sign up... he's basically a used car salesman for the Army... he'll tell you whatever you want to hear.



At least get some basic knowledge and hear what they have to say, then research on your own.How does it work with the military paying for school?If you want to be nurse your best bet would be to go to school join the rotc and then join the army as an officer and have them pay off your school. The GI bill is not enough for nursing school you will have tho give the army any where from 4 to 8 years. Do not go to a recruiter they will talk you in to enlisting right now talk to a rotc instructor at a collegeHow does it work with the military paying for school?
My exhusband was in the military for 4 years. How much your gi bill we be for depends on what you do and how good a deal you make......don't let them screw you. The MOSs they need badly will offer more money in the form of the gi bill and cash bonuses (but don't end up doing something shitty like being a cook).



Anyway, he gets about $1200 for every FULL month he is in school, for four years. In January, when students only go half a month, he only get half a months pay. If he wants to go to grad school, the army won't pay for that. It basically will help pay for his bachelor's degree, and he still has loans even with the army money. You can't pay tuition and live on 1200 a month.
http://www.goarmy.com/amedd/hpsp.jsp?iom鈥?/a>



The Army will pay for your graduate school to become a nurse.



Before that, you can look into an ROTC/nursing program for an undergraduate degree



http://www.goarmy.com/rotc/nurse_program鈥?/a>



The folks who mention the GI Bill are talking about benefits you get AFTER you serve - if you want the Army to pay for your degree, consider ROTC.



Some nurses are also enlisted - those with only 4 year degrees, for example. In some cases, the Army will pay off your student loans. Check out the Army page for information on the medical training/programs availableHow does it work with the military paying for school?
the AF does 100% Tuition assistance.....

You enlist, go through basic training and tech school and get your CDC's (job books) completed..normally about 6 months to a year and then you can go to school during off-duty time, or online. The AF pays up to $750 dollard per course per term with a max of $4,500 a year...you can use the GI bill to "top up" and pay for the remaining tuition should you need to...not sure on the time in service requirements is to do so....but the AF pays for most of your schooling....and if you go in in medical...you get some college credit for completing tech school and other training.......not a bad deal.

You do a four year enlistment, learn the job while going to college for it.....and when you finish your enlistment you can go your own way or decide to stay in......the AF will pay for a Master's degree...they are doing so for mine :)

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