Depends on their occupational specialty.
Reserve Officer Training Corps It trains officer for duty in the Army. Upon graduation from Army ROTC, you will earn the bar of a Second Lieutenant and be commissioned into the Active Army, Army Reserve or Army National Guard. The other branches have their own types: NROTC is Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps, which provides both Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Officers. AFROTC is Air Force Reserve Officer Training Crops. NJROTC is Naval Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps, which provides both Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Officers. MCROTC Marine Corps Reserve Officers Training Corps (If you put a "J" it means junior which is high school ROTC)
Reserve Officer Training Corps It trains officer for duty in the Army. Upon graduation from Army ROTC, you will earn the bar of a Second Lieutenant and be commissioned into the Active Army, Army Reserve or Army National Guard. The other branches have their own types: NROTC is Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps, which provides both Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Officers. AFROTC is Air Force Reserve Officer Training Crops. NJROTC is Naval Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps, which provides both Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Officers. MCROTC Marine Corps Reserve Officers Training Corps (If you put a "J" it means junior which is high school ROTC)
A Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) purpose is to prepare college students to become an officers for commissioning in Navy and Marine Corps.
The Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) is a college-based program in the United States designed to train students to become officers in the military. Participants receive military training while completing their college education, often with the benefit of scholarships and stipends. Upon graduation, they are commissioned as officers in the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine Corps, depending on their specific ROTC program. ROTC aims to develop leadership skills and prepare students for military service.
The three service components of ROTC (Reserve Officers' Training Corps) are the Army ROTC, Navy ROTC, and Air Force ROTC. Each program is designed to prepare college students for leadership roles as commissioned officers in their respective branches of the military. Participants engage in military training, leadership development, and academic coursework while completing their college degrees. Upon graduation, cadets are commissioned as officers and serve in active duty or reserve roles.
It depends on the person.
Yes. You get paid for your monthly UTAs, you get paid for your two weeks of Annual Training, and you get paid for any time you're activated.
Navy SEAL officers can get deployed for as long as 8 to 10 months out of the year, not counting the times that they will be gone for training also.
Navy new accession training (NAT) is a program that allows civilians with skills comparable to Navy ratings to enlist directly in the Navy Reserve.
Navy ROTC is the Reserve Officers Training Corps. It teaches the basic skills to become a commissioned officer in the navy. Terminology, etiquette, formalities are taught. In addition there is strategy and history as well as navigation.
Richard Anson has written: 'A list of Catholic officers on the active list of the Royal navy, Royal marines, Royal naval reserve, R.N. volunteer reserve etc., December 1918' -- subject(s): Great Britain, Great Britain. Royal Marines, Great Britain. Royal Naval Reserve, Great Britain. Royal Navy
The Difference between the Navy and the Navy Reserves is that Navy is Active duty. This means that naval personnel belong to, work for, and get paid by the Navy 24 hours a day. Navy Reserve personnel are civilians most of the time. They work for the navy 1 weekend a month and 2 weeks out of the year. The rest of the time they lead what ever life they want. The Navy reserves is like the US Navy's savings account of personnel. When they do not have enough people to support a mission, they call navy reserve personnel to active duty to fill in the gaps. Naval Officers commissioned through the NROTC program may receive their commission into the Naval Reserve or the regular Navy. Those in the reserves will serve on active duty for four to six years before being transferred to a reserve unit near where they are going to live. While there are those who go directly to the Naval Reserve right out of BT, the vast majority of Reservists (myself included) are, or were, active duty Navy sailors at some point, most being either officers or NCO's. Individual Reservists can also be called to Temporary Active Duty, in lieu of an entire unit. This is done in cases where the sailor has unique skills or qualifications necessary for the mission requirements.