///AMG
Well-Known Member
Thanks everyone for your responses! I was just looking at the navy option as well and did a lot of research on that. However, I see that it is practically harder to get a flight slot. I am majoring in biology. I've heard that the Navy likes people with degrees in Aerospace engineering and physics stuff. Is this true? Does the navy mostly choose people with AE degrees over others? I talked to ROTC students/grads who were going for a flight slot who didn't major in the 2 fields and they were assigned to go to submarine warfare and lost any chance of a flight slot. I also read on air warriors about submarine drafts.
I would say that is largely inaccurate. Little bits of truth in there, such as the supposed "sub draft" a few years ago. Is it harder in the Navy? I wouldn't really say so, but there is no PLC-air type of contract available so maybe it seems that way. You can however do Navy OCS with an aviation contract. Does the Navy like technical majors? Yes. Are the majority of Naval Aviators engineering/physics/technical types? No. If I had to guess, probably half the guys/gals I know were non-technical majors in college. The biggest things are your GPA and ASTB scores. In terms of grades, that is more where I saw the tech vs non-tech thing come into play. Generally you need a higher GPA to be competitive in something like poli sci, than you do in say double E. But I think the biggest thing that got guys, at least when I was going through the process, was feeling they needed to be in a tech major and just blindly continuing with it, even after it wasn't going well. Plenty of folks who tanked their cumulative GPA over the course of 2 years in lower division engineering classes, before they were wisely advised to switch majors. Those are the guys who are kind of fodder when it comes to community selection prior to commissioning. Pick a major you think you would enjoy and excel in. The Navy really doesn't care what that is, as long as you do well. If that is biology for you, I wouldn't sweat it. FWIW I think the AF is quite a bit more hard up for engineering types, so this might not apply for USAF hopefuls.