The answer is NO, though more details are needed.
First and foremost are you a member of the Simultaneous Membership Program (SMP)?
Contracting with ROTC is where you assume the obligation which generally varies based on years "Uncle Same" has paid for your college. Usually the obligations vary based on the time you are required to assume active duty service (though reserve and national guard options exist). The most common is the 4 and 4 which means 4 on active duty and 4 on IRR.
ROTC Scholarship Cadet
Member of ROTC for 5 years
United States Army Officer for 10 years
United States Army Cadet Cadre for 1 year
United States Army Recruiting Company Commander for 1 year
Unless you enlist you will not go to AIT for ROTC. The enlisted side and officer sides of the military have different training schools. After ROTC you will go to BOLC (Basic Officer Leaders Course) A and B. A is like the officer Basic and B is like officer AIT.
Yes. JROTC is in high school, ROTC is in college. Technically, you do not have to take JROTC at all to take ROTC. Generally, people who take ROTC in college are joining the military afterwards. The same in not necessarily true for JROTC.
i don't know about the non-scholarship part, but if u are in smp you have signed a Contract with the Guard or Reserves, not ROTC. This means if you quit or get kicked out of ROTC you still have an obligation to the army, and from what i understand you will be demoted to privet and will go to basic like everyone else.
Yes, obviously. But do you pay back the stipend?
You only need a degree if you want to be an officer. You can either go to school on your own to obtain a Bachelor's degree or join an ROTC program which will have a contract for service upon graduation
No
ROTC are available from several different branches of the military. http://www.goarmy.com/rotc/scholarships.html This link provides information about how the army will grant scholarships.
Depends. If you attend one of the US Military Academies (West Point, Air Force Academy, Naval Academy, or Coast Guard Academy) or you go to school on an ROTC scholarship, you have an obligation to actively serve for five years. If you took ROTC but ROTC had nothing to do with funding your school, there is no obligation to go into the military.
go back to health class and don't do drugs....you wont have this dilemma.
It is possible, yes.
If you go to Navy ROTC with Nurse option then it will greatly help you pursue a career as a navy nurse.
I have been wondering the same question as you. "What college is the army ROTC the best at" I have found out that the military doesn't rank college ROTC programs anymore but private companies do. So my suggestion is go to a book store and look for a book on the army ROTC and which colleges it is best at.