个人资料
正文

情真意切的择校建议

(2013-04-15 13:53:59) 下一个

这是一位海军官校毕业生在2006年的帖子,给那些拿到军校和其他名校录取的学生的建议,情真意切令人动容。

他是1991年毕业于海军官校,工程学士学位,作为一名军官在海军服役5年后退役,在以后的10年里,他做过主管、工程师、顾问、经理,现在是一家100强公司的主管。他有工商管理(MBA)和工业工程科学双硕士。

西点军校、海军官校、圣母大学、麻省理工、哈佛?到底该选哪一个?

做决定之前你必须先确定你的决定最终会给你带来什么,比如说你想当医生,就不要去军校,因为军校毕业后去医学院的机会很小,只有极少非常优秀的才可能;如果你觉得志在飞行员,也许你要考虑考虑,因为去海军官校并不会保证你一定能成为飞行员;如果你就是想成为一名军官,那么毫无疑问就去军校。

你要想一想10年、15年、20年之后你会怎样?

美国企业这些年来用人强调的重要特质之一是领导能力(leadership),企业中可以有很多高技术人才,但是说道领导能力,军校毕业生一定有优势,相比哈佛、沃顿MBA,我会优先雇用军校生。因为军校毕业生一定会有5年的工作经验,在那5年里你领导别人,运作成百上千万美元的昂贵设备,而且是在非常挑战的环境中。当你23岁的时候,你要比别人35岁时在企业中负的责任还要多,也许你认为这没有什么,但是我保证雇主们很看重这些。

军校会训练你自信,这是其他大学不能做到的。你不能想像在过去15年中,当我处在人生低谷的时候,我的信念是:“我新生的魔鬼训练都经过了,这不算什么。”我在海军官校所学到的让我能接受所有的挑战。

你会结交亲密如家人一般的朋友,无论你在高峰还是低谷,他们都一如既往地支持你。也许你们很多年没见面,但见面后也仿佛昨天才相见。

另一方面,如果你想成为医生,去圣母大学,非常好;想成为顶尖工程师,做出色的项目,你被MIT录取,那就一定要去MIT;你想成为银行家,你被哈佛录取,去哈佛没商量!

我的忠告:

1)选择要理智。明确你的选择能为你想要的将来做最好的准备。

2)为你自己选择,不是为你父母,你男/女朋友或其他人。你必须做自私而冷酷的决定,这是你自己的生活/生命,而不是其他人的。

3)不要因为恐惧而不做决定。

4)听父母的建议而不是朋友的。

5)谨慎对待升学顾问的引导,他们也许有偏见,而不是考虑你的最佳利益。

6)为自己的选择而欢欣鼓舞,如果不是,那你可能选得不对。

Originally Posted by Zaphod
Zaphod 4-19-2006

Advice for those who haven’t decided yet…

A little birdie came to me with a dilemma. What happens when the long-awaited letter of appointment finally shows up? For some, the answer is obvious: You hold the postman at gunpoint while your kid checks yes and hands it back to him to mail. Easy, right?

Not always.

There is an old saying (Trekies pay attention) that says, "It is often better to want than to have. It is illogical, but often true." It is true, and can be true of almost anything; a car, a boat, a house, a piece of jewelry.

Or an appointment to a Service Academy....

What I'm going to try and offer here is some advice to those sitting at their parent's table night after night, staring at their letter of appointment, but not knowing which box to check. Perhaps the parents standing by (razors poised over outstretched wrists) will find some comfort, too.

The scenario is not as uncommon as you might think. Hopefully I'll be able to offer some insight to help you with your decision.

Now, before I begin, I've noticed several new names around here lately, so if you CC veterans will kindly indulge me for a moment, I'd like to introduce myself to the new folk as well as lay the groundwork for some points I will make later.

I am a graduate of the Naval Academy Prep School (1987) and the United States Naval Academy (1991). My BS is in General Engineering. I served five years as a Surface Warfare Officer and then left the Navy, and have spent the last ten years working as a Supervisor, Engineer, Consultant, Manager, and now Director of Quality Assurance in the medical device and diagnostics industry (6.5 years in a Fortune 100 corporation). I have a Master of Business Administration (2000) and a Master of Science in Industrial Engineering (2001) from the University of Miami. I am a certified Six Sigma Black Belt.

I am also hoplessly biased toward the Service Academies in general, and USNA in particular (just in case anyone's missed it ).

In short, I've been there, done that, and still wear the T-shirts (that fit). I've seen and lived the Service Academy experience from every conceiveable angle except as a parent, and I hope to do that in about 12 years when my oldest becomes part of the class of 2021 at USNA (because Lord knows, her Daddy ain't lettin' no daughter o' his disgrace the family name by going to Woopville or Zoomieville! )

This discussion is primarily for the applicants who have not yet decided whether they want to go or not. I particularly invite the Mids and Cadets we have here to offer their viewpoints as well, since they are there NOW. Who knows? Some of THEM may find this useful, too. If so, then so much the better.

As for you parents, hold on for the ride, because here we go.....

So........ You got your appointment and you're sitting there wondering, "Holy smokes! I got in! NOW what?"

Well, delaying isn't going to help. You must decide, and you must decide soon. It is a cruel lesson in life that when opportunity knocks, you'd better damn well answer the door, or you will spend the rest of your life regretting it. A decision must be made, but which one?

USNA? USMA? Notre Dame? MIT? Harvard?

WHICH ONE?

"Maybe my parents will choose for me!" Survey says: WRONG ANSWER. This is YOUR decision to make, Junior. No one else's but YOURS. This may be the first major decision you make in your life, but YOU have to make it, and your LIFE depends on it. I'm not being dramatic. This is cold, hard, REALITY. Welcome to adulthood!

When debating whether to attend a Service Academy, do not be put off by doubts you may have because you don't seem as gungy as the others around you who have already memorized the Reef Points. Some folks live and breath Army or Navy. Others go in with a bit more reserve. Perfectly normal.

As with so many other choices in life, you must first decide where you want to end up after the decision is made. More than once I have advised folks who, say, want to be a doctor, NOT to attend a Service Academy. Why? Because the chances of getting into Med School out of a Service Academy are VERY low, and only the best and brightest get the opportunity.

So decide right now: Do you want to be a pilot, or a doctor, or a submariner, or a Green Beret, or do you want to be an OFFICER who happens to be a pilot, or a doctor, or a submariner, or a Green Beret? In other words, if you don't get your choice of Service Selection, will you still be happy, or is being the pilot more important? If the answer is the latter, then don't go, because nothing is guaranteed. If, however, you want to be an officer and a graduate more than anything else, THEN GO!

You have to realize that time changes people. When your service obligation expires, you may decide that you want to leave the military for any number of reasons. If that happens, what do you want to do? Where do you see yourself in 10, 15, 20 years? Based on THAT answer, you make your decision.

One of the most important traits sought after in Corporate America these days is LEADERSHIP. Companies are awash in people with technical degrees who can calculate the movement of an electron across the universe or across a circuit board, but can't compose a coherent sentence or head a team (ask me how I know! ). When it comes to leadership, the Service Academies have everyone else beat, hands down. I'd rather have a SA graduate on my staff than some Wharton or Harvard MBA.

When you graduate a SA, you are guaranteed five years (or more, depending upon service selection) of employment. In that job, you will be leading people and be in charge of millions of dollars of equipment in some pretty challenging environments. At 23, you will have more responsibilities than some people in Corporate America have at 35. You may not appreciate how valuable that is, but I guarantee you the people HIRING do!

The Academies will teach you self-confidence in a way no other university can. You have no idea how many times in the last 15 years I've fallen back on, "If I made it through Plebe Year, I can do this, too!" My mother dying, job pressures, getting two Master's degrees while working full-time, a divorce, turning a $35 million plant around alone, branching out alone into consulting. ALL of these challenges were made more endurable by what I learned at USNA. If I could make it there, I'll make it anywhere. (Apologies to Old Blue Eyes)

You will make friends that will be family, and who will stand by you through thick and thin. You may spend years not seeing someone, but as soon as you do it's like you were together yesterday. We take care of our own.

There is no drug in this universe (short of Rapture, and I still have my doubts), that compares to the euphoric, boundless high you feel when, after four (or five, like me) years of effort, you throw your cover into the air along with your classmates. Nothing comes close. The birth of my children didn't come close. A classmate and friend who sat next to me at my graduation was my next-door neighbor at NAPS. He was also our anchorman (last in the class). When those covers went up, we held each other and cried like babies, and we didn't care who saw it. First off, we had earned the right, secondly, a whole bunch of our classmates were doing the same thing. Calling us wimps at that moment would have gotten you mashed into paste.

So there is the "pro" side. I can go on for hours about it, but in fairness, let's look at the other side.

What if you want to be a doctor more than an officer? No problem. Being a doctor is an admirable goal. If you choose to attend Notre Dame to study medicine, then you have my repsect. If you want to be a hard-core engineer and do some real number-crunching on some great projects, and you get accepted to MIT, then by God take the opportunity! If you want to be a banker, and have an offer to Harvard, then take it and go, and never look back!

All these examples require that you want something specific that the Service Academies either cannot provide, or from which the opportunities are extremely limited. To go to a SA under those conditions would be foolish, no matter how good the Academy in question is. These schools have their purposes, and your goals have to line up with them.

Some have voiced reasons not to have selected USXA as "I'm not sure I want the regimented lifestyle" or "I'm not sure I'm cut out for the Service". Well, if that's the case, then you bloody well should never have applied.

Some are afraid they can't hack the regimen. I call BS. If you can get INTO the Academy, you can get OUT with a degree and a ring. You think the government is going to invest $250,000 on you if they think you CAN'T make it?

Some are afraid the Academy is no fun. What, do we stand at parade rest while taking showers? NO! Sure, Plebe Year is tough, but after that, USXA is not unlike a good deal of universities. You have clubs, dances, and all the rest. Sure, you can't go out every night (not good for grades, anyway), but when you take 4,500 of the nation's best and brightest, lock them together, and add a little pressure, you'd be AMAZED at just how creative and fun it can get. It's no bed of roses, but the end is definitely worth it.


I'm going to take a break now, and let you guys think about it. I am at your service to answer questions. Let me leave you with this:

1) Choose wisely. Make sure that your choice is the one that best prepares you for the future you want. I can tell you for a fact that for "general purposes", nothing beats a Service Academy. For specialties or fields not addressed by a SA, then the choice is easy: go somewhere else.

2) Choose for YOURSELF. Do not choose anything because you think it will make your parents happy, or your girlfriend proud, or any of that junk. You must be viscously selfish and dreadfully cold in this decision. This is YOUR life you're dealing with here, and no one else's.

3) Do not make decisions out of fear. Fear and doubt are normal, especially when facing Plebe Year. Remember that over a thousand people going into USXA with you this summer WILL graduate. If they can, why can't you?

4) Do not listen to your friends. Listen to your PARENTS. THEY are the ones who have spent your lifetime making you into what you are today. It is THEY who stay up late at night, worried to death that you haven't decided, or if you'll make a sound decision. TALK TO THEM. They have forgotten more about life than you currently know. What do your stupid friends know that your parents don't, and which ACTUALLY MATTERS?

5) Beware of college counselors who try and guide you to THEIR choice because of THEIR prejudices. "You want to go to NAVY? WHY?" If someone asks you that, walk away. They don't have your best interests at heart.

6) Be excited abut your choice. If you're not, you chose wrong.

Okay. I'm tired. Think about it, and DECIDE. If you need some help, I'll be here.

Good luck!

- Z
[ 打印 ]
阅读 ()评论 (0)
评论
目前还没有任何评论
登录后才可评论.