The ROTC Scholarship GPA Cutoff: What Happens If You Drop Below a 2.5?
The Cadre Meeting
You won a highly competitive, 4-year National Army ROTC Scholarship out of high school. It pays for your full tuition at a $50,000/year private university.
You arrive at college, and you are overwhelmed. Between early morning Physical Training (PT), ROTC labs, and a brutal Engineering workload, your grades slip. Your first-semester college GPA is a 2.3.
You are called into the Professor of Military Science's (PMS) office. Are you getting kicked out? Do you have to pay the Army back?
The 2.5 Cumulative Rule
To maintain an Army ROTC scholarship, you must generally maintain a 2.5 Cumulative GPA and at least a 2.0 Semester GPA. (Navy and Air Force ROTC have similar, sometimes stricter, requirements).If you drop below this standard, you are not instantly fired. You enter the disciplinary process.
Step 1: Academic Probation
The first time you miss the standard, you will likely be placed on Academic Probation.Step 2: Suspension of Benefits
If you fail to raise your GPA, the cadre can escalate to a Suspension of Benefits.Step 3: Disenrollment (The Nightmare Scenario)
If you chronically fail academically, you will face a disenrollment board. If you are kicked out of ROTC after your freshman year, the consequences are severe:The Strategy: ROTC is an academic program first. If your engineering major is destroying your GPA, switch to an easier major. The Army does not care if you have a 3.0 in History or a 2.5 in Physics—they want officers who meet the standard.
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