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Some excerpts from an interesting series of posts over on
rec.aviation.military.naval. "...better shot for a pilot slot by getting his BS in aeronautical engineering...." "An engineering degree would have no bearing on selection for flight training." "Actually it is true. Degree does not seem to matter. Back in the 80's when I was working on a masters, I was also a contract simulator instructor at my old training base (Chase) and did an analysis for my statistics class of degrees vs completions. What I found was that there was absolutley no correlation between the type of degree and the succsess (or failure) of the prospective naval aviator." "As a career Naval Aviator with experience, albeit dated, in both the Training Command and OPNAV, I've watched this thread spin out with some interest. As the Director of Research at the National Defense University in one of my prior incarnations, I was privy to a study substantiating your remarks. When launched on a quest to find the "Prime Indicator of Success" - the Holy Grail of the Nugget Watchers - the study I am most familiar with came up with the revolutionary but counterintuitive conclusion that it was not being an Eagle Scout or a BS in AE or the kind of a baby that quit nursing every time an airplane flew over but whether or not the candidate - get this - had a paper route." I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) Bob Moore |
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On Apr 19, 5:02 pm, Bob Moore wrote:
Some excerpts from an interesting series of posts over on rec.aviation.military.naval. "...better shot for a pilot slot by getting his BS in aeronautical engineering...." "An engineering degree would have no bearing on selection for flight training." "Actually it is true. Degree does not seem to matter. Back in the 80's when I was working on a masters, I was also a contract simulator instructor at my old training base (Chase) and did an analysis for my statistics class of degrees vs completions. What I found was that there was absolutley no correlation between the type of degree and the succsess (or failure) of the prospective naval aviator." "As a career Naval Aviator with experience, albeit dated, in both the Training Command and OPNAV, I've watched this thread spin out with some interest. As the Director of Research at the National Defense University in one of my prior incarnations, I was privy to a study substantiating your remarks. When launched on a quest to find the "Prime Indicator of Success" - the Holy Grail of the Nugget Watchers - the study I am most familiar with came up with the revolutionary but counterintuitive conclusion that it was not being an Eagle Scout or a BS in AE or the kind of a baby that quit nursing every time an airplane flew over but whether or not the candidate - get this - had a paper route." I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) Bob Moore So does that mean you were paper trained? |
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Bob Moore wrote:
I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) But have you ever stayed at a Holiday Inn Express? Matt |
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Matt Whiting wrote in news:2SSVh.4022$Oc.201113
@news1.epix.net: Bob Moore wrote: I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) But have you ever stayed at a Holiday Inn Express? Shudder! Don't mention the war.. Bertie |
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) Where I grew up, you had to have a car, and be able to drive, to have a paper route. g -- Jim in NC |
#6
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote in message 46.128... Some excerpts from an interesting series of posts over on rec.aviation.military.naval. "...better shot for a pilot slot by getting his BS in aeronautical engineering...." "An engineering degree would have no bearing on selection for flight training." "Actually it is true. Degree does not seem to matter. Back in the 80's when I was working on a masters, I was also a contract simulator instructor at my old training base (Chase) and did an analysis for my statistics class of degrees vs completions. What I found was that there was absolutley no correlation between the type of degree and the succsess (or failure) of the prospective naval aviator." "As a career Naval Aviator with experience, albeit dated, in both the Training Command and OPNAV, I've watched this thread spin out with some interest. As the Director of Research at the National Defense University in one of my prior incarnations, I was privy to a study substantiating your remarks. When launched on a quest to find the "Prime Indicator of Success" - the Holy Grail of the Nugget Watchers - the study I am most familiar with came up with the revolutionary but counterintuitive conclusion that it was not being an Eagle Scout or a BS in AE or the kind of a baby that quit nursing every time an airplane flew over but whether or not the candidate - get this - had a paper route." I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) Bob Moore Interesting. My read on this based on the people I know who are both in, and have gone through the program is that a lot of it depends on where you want to be along your career path down the line a bit. Engineering and Science degrees may not make a huge difference up front, but for specialized Naval career paths such as TPS for example, or say outside the aviation venue into the Nuclear Sub program , these degrees are almost essential. Dudley Henriques |
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Morgans wrote:
Where I grew up, you had to have a car, and be able to drive, to have a paper route. g how did you manage? I did that for a while, but using a mopped and it turned out that my costs (keeping the thing running with gas and insurance and spare parts, etc.) was higher than what I was making; a bicycle would have been tricky (these dang papers are heavy); --Sylvain |
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Bob Moore wrote:
When launched on a quest to find the "Prime Indicator of Success" - the Holy Grail of the Nugget Watchers - the study I am most familiar with came up with the revolutionary but counterintuitive conclusion that it was not being an Eagle Scout or a BS in AE or the kind of a baby that quit nursing every time an airplane flew over but whether or not the candidate - get this - had a paper route." I personally delivered the morning paper for four years. :-) Amazing. Wen I think back to the paper boy who delivered our paper when I was in high school, and how many times he crashed and burned trying to heave a paper while riding his bike on our very steep hill all I can say is... "Naval Aviation". -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#9
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![]() "Sylvain" wrote how did you manage? I did that for a while, but using a mopped and it turned out that my costs (keeping the thing running with gas and insurance and spare parts, etc.) was higher than what I was making; a bicycle would have been tricky (these dang papers are heavy); I should have been more clear. I didn't manage. I would have had to ride or pedal 50 miles or more (very rural) at around 4 AM, and without a car and being old enough to drive, it would have been impossible. I let adults do the paper thing. g -- Jim in NC |
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Nomen Nescio writes:
I can tell you that when I was about 4 months from graduation (BS Mechanical Engineering), the Navy and Air Force were going BTTW to recruit me. I was wined and dined, lodged, toured, and even fixed up with a couple of attractive female officers. They were all going to train me to drive ANYTHING that I wanted, from F-16's to submarines (the coolest tour I got was a fast attack sub). All this time, I thought it was the Engineering degree. I guess they'd found out that I had spent 3 years slinging newsprint at 6 am. It was probably neither of those things, since both are very common. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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