ROTC cadets typically aren't paid for being ROTC cadets. However, if they drill with a Reserve or National Guard unit, they receive pay equivalent to what an E-5 in that unit would receive.
Yes, but not at the start of Junior ROTC. College, yes.
Yes, all majors are accepted by ROTC
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.
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.
During bootcamp you'll always be an E1 no matter what your contract says. You won't receive any promotions such as if you enlist as an E3 due to college credits, or ROTC until you graduate. E1 pay is currently around $1400\month
E3 makes about 47,000 a year
Almost literally anywhere.
Students who are contracted ROTC cadets pay for very little in college. A full ROTC scholarship includes: tuition and fees, $600/ semester for books, and a monthly spending stipend of $300-$500 a month. Also, ROTC classes are available to all college students for free and no military obligation.
If you apply for an ROTC scholarship and get it you go through four yrs of college and they pay for it .. free college with a little pocket money for you every month .. that sounds pretty motivating
Most colleges will offer an army ROTC if the applicant is one that they particularly wish to have enter their college It is worth asking when applying to the college.
there are 2 yr and 3 yr ROTC programs where you would start in the middle of your college and continue to the end
No, it is not a major. You major in another subject and take one course a semester for ROTC.