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Academy brings leaders to life

Oct 29, 2007 12:00 AM (348 days ago) by Jason Flanagan, The Examiner
This story ranks # 4,660 of 7,819
Related Topics: Annapolis
U.S. Naval Academy barber Lily Driver, of Glen Burnie, puts the finishing touches on a plebe’s haircut on Induction Day, the first day of training.
(Arianne Starnes/Examiner)
U.S. Naval Academy barber Lily Driver, of Glen Burnie, puts the finishing touches on a plebe’s haircut on Induction Day, the first day of training.

Annapolis (Map, News) - William Miller is the academic dean and provost for the U.S. Naval Academy, the Navy’s undergraduate school, in Annapolis. A graduate of the academy, Miller took over the school’s academic functioning in 1997. Previously, he was the associate provost for research and economic development at West Virginia University. Miller is a retired rear admiral and a former chief of naval research in Washington.

Q Compare the Naval Academy to a typical college or university.

A The Naval Academy is like any other undergraduate school. We have classes that anyone at the University of Maryland, College Park would find familiar. And we’re accredited in the same way. We differ in that we know who will hire our graduates. Because we know their employers [the Navy or Marine Corps] and understand their needs, we can prepare them for that job. Our curriculum prepares them to serve the needs of the country’s defense. Midshipmen earn bachelor of science degrees and account for about one-third of the Navy’s officers.

Q What kind of careers are available to midshipmen after they graduate?

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A They enter the Navy as an ensign or the Marine Corps as a second lieutenant. They either enter into flight school, work on a submarine or surface ship or enter the Marine Corps. A few enroll into the Navy SEALs program. They serve three to four years at sea, then transfer to other career opportunities in the Navy. The Navy puts officers through graduate school for degrees in naval science, political theory and any other field that can help the Navy and Marine Corps.

QIs there life outside the military for graduates?

A Only about 40 percent become career officers [serving 20 or more years]. We have produced more astronauts than any other school. The dean of Harvard’s business school once asked me how she could get more academy graduates. While they are no different academically, they possess the leadership and ethics needed to succeed in business. Many midshipmen have gone on to become CEOs of major companies.

Q The academy’s stated mission is the mental, moral and physical development of midshipmen. What about moral development?

A We’re developing the future leaders of the Navy and Marine Corps. The midshipmen come in with a foundation of ethics and leadership from their high schools, families and churches. But we teach them to face tough ethical questions, because one day they’re going to face tough decisions in combat, and they have to live to a higher ethical standard. A SEAL team that had academy graduates were discovered by local goat herders while behind enemy lines in Afghanistan. They could have easily killed the locals to protect their mission, but they let them go. Eventually, the SEALs got into a gunfight, and only one survived. It was a tough decision, but ethically they made the right one by not killing an unarmed civilian.

Q What about physical development?

A Ninety percent of our brigade were varsity athletes [in high school]. It’s not only the physical aspect we like in athletes, but also the fact that athletes have to prepare themselves for games and have character and leadership. Young people come here thinking they’re in shape, but we get them in shape. Mandatory exercise starts at 5:30 a.m. During their plebe [freshman] year, they’ll run hundreds of miles and do thousands of push-ups.

Q What about the great reputation of the Academy’s engineering program?

A I don’t believe in polls that rate and rank schools, [but] we have a first-rate undergraduate engineering school. We have a low student-to-faculty ratio, and we are more project-oriented, where midshipmen grapple with unscripted, real-world problems. Two-thirds of our graduates majored in math and science. We have a propulsion laboratory, two wind tunnels, a subcritical nuclear reactor and telescopes. How does that compare to other engineering schools? Our laboratory complex is enormous. I don’t know of any other school with a lab complex like ours.

jflanagan@baltimoreexaminer.com

The Examiner is taking an indepth look at colleges and universities throughout the state. Click here to read the entire series.

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8:44 AM MST on Fri., May. 23, 2008 re: "For many women, this school is a perfect fit"

Examiner Reader said:
The institution is a fraud. They treat employees unfairly and they have forgotten the roots of the institution- the undergraduate women and the communal attitude. The school has become driven by profit and has turn into an old boys club. Higher-ups chum it up with each other while "lesser" staff are walked all over. The students enjoy their time, but with limited resources and budget- the school is having a hard time providing for their campus members.

5 agree | 5 disagree
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10:19 AM MST on Sun., Mar. 23, 2008 re: "Be in demand; become a nurse"

Examiner Reader said:
my question is at the end of your statement you said that you don't want the most quilfied nurse to take care of you. why that just don't make sense. I just retired from the military and am looking to become a nurse and if I was some old person laying bed I would like to know that there was someone that was well quilified to take care of me. thank you for your time in reading this note

6 agree | 6 disagree
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7:54 PM MST on Mon., Nov. 5, 2007 re: "Be in demand; become a nurse"

Examiner Reader said:
The Maryland State Board of Nursing should let LPN's do the MD degrees not just BSN on line... The Associates On-line degree program is only 12-18 months long to complete, compared to 18-24 months for the MD. And it costs half as much to acquire....Some of our dedicated nurses are moving to other states to complete MD programs. Many don't come back to Maryland to work.I like it that way. And I promise not to delete anyone else's comment ever again

179 agree | 190 disagree
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7:53 PM MST on Mon., Nov. 5, 2007 re: "Be in demand; become a nurse"

Examiner Reader said:
The Maryland State Board of Nursing should let LPN's do the MD degrees not just BSN on line... The Associates On-line degree program is only 12-18 months long to complete, compared to 18-24 months for the MD. And it costs half as much to acquire....Some of our dedicated nurses are moving to other states to complete MD programs. Many don't come back to Maryland to work.I like it that way. And I promise not to delete anyone else's comment ever again

188 agree | 190 disagree
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11:52 AM MST on Mon., Nov. 5, 2007 re: "Be in demand; become a nurse"

Examiner Reader said:
The Maryland State Board of Nursing should let LPN's do the RN Associates degrees not just BSN on line... The Associates On-line degree program is only 12-18 months long to complete. Compared to 18-24 months for BSN. And it costs half as much to acquire....Some of our dedicated nurses are moving to other states to complete programs. Many don't come back to Maryland to work.

178 agree | 185 disagree
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2:53 PM MST on Sun., Oct. 28, 2007 re: "Promises aside, read the contract"

Examiner Reader said:
If the military truly wanted to have potential recruits understand the enlistment contract it would simply reduce the entire bogus contract to the following infamous 40 words from Section C, Paragraph 9: "Laws and regulations that govern military personnel may change without notice to me. Such changes may affect my status, pay, allowances, benefits, and responsibilities as a member of the Armed Forces regardless of the provisions of this enlistment/reenlistment document." - Pat Elder

172 agree | 199 disagree
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1:19 PM MST on Mon., Oct. 22, 2007 re: "Join up, go to war, get a degree"

Don said:
I tried to join up they told me I was too old. I'm 64 I think I'll file papers for age discrimination.

219 agree | 194 disagree
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6:15 PM MST on Mon., Oct. 15, 2007 re: "Loyola teaches with outside service"

Examiner Reader said:
Any plans in the works to overthrow the Vatican again or is that something you can't talk about?

211 agree | 186 disagree
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5:53 AM MST on Mon., Sep. 10, 2007 re: "UMES is a model of diversity"

Diversity? said:
What diversity? The article talks only about blacks.

355 agree | 212 disagree
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6:00 AM MST on Mon., Jul. 9, 2007 re: "A passion for ‘more education’ is key"

Examiner Reader said:
Great article...My 2 kids went there and it was the best 8 yrs anyone could ask for. Both have since gone on to great jobs and both value their days at SMCM.

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2:29 PM MST on Mon., Jun. 4, 2007 re: "McDaniel College: Real-world learning"

Examiner Reader said:
Glad to see you acknowledge McDaniel College. I am a grad ( Class of "61 ) and a Trustee--and very proud to be both. George Varga

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2:12 PM MST on Mon., May. 21, 2007 re: "Campus growth is Coppin’s focus"

Examiner Reader said:
Over the last 20 years or more "Baltimore City School System," has been under the microscope of Judge Garbish (Special Education). Morgan, Johns Hopkin, Coppin, all have had opportunities as research institutions to address this major educational problem and the poverty rate, un-employment, single mothers crime. Coppin has had its misfortunes, and attracted low quality of instructors whom are not concerned with the social economical, educational, problems that plague the Urban Inner City youth. Poverty is a key element in Baltimore City. Politicians does not give a hoot of the demographics nor the incidents of poverty across the city. The fourth count census 2000 is a clear in measuring how people live. African Americans are left out of the loop "Johns Hopkins are the main architect to disenfranchise the poor, disadvantaged. They are the major research institution in Maryland from all indications the African American community is ignored by the major players.

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9:58 AM MST on Mon., May. 21, 2007 re: "Campus growth is Coppin’s focus"

Examiner Reader said:
Coppin State should be proud that it focuses on academics and not sports. Who cares if the baseball team lost 44 games in a year. The students who earn a degree will have more power than any hitter on a baseball diamond.

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10:10 AM MST on Mon., Apr. 23, 2007 re: "Love to read? This college is for you"

Examiner Reader said:
Excellent and informative series that parents and students can use to decide on a Maryland college or university. Thanks!

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