Main Menus
Make cash!
| sharewaremsin Articles: 6 | |
| TimCroy Articles: 21 | |
| Patrick Thona32 Articles: 5 | |
| DavidGrantz Articles: 5 | |
| kenny Articles: 9 | |
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License, which means you may freely reprint it, in its entiretly, provided you include the author's resource box along with LIVE links (without "nofollow" tags).
View PDF | Print View | Html Version
by: SalvadorPaez
Total views: 3
Word Count: 316
Some people feel the need to be patriotic and to protect the United States form all its enemies, foreign and domestic. And when that call sounds, the US Navy will be happy to accept you. It is actually very simple to apply and be accepted in the Navy. You just have to find the right recruiter and the closest recruiting station to get in. The recruiters will be happy to answer all your queries.
The most common questions are about the things that will happen when you are already in active duty, including details of the routine, practices, benefits, vacations, options, schooling, and the like. Another common question is about the retirement options after the Navy, including pension, insurance, and other benefits.
When you've confirmed your decision to join the Navy, your recruiter will schedule you for a military entrance processing exam, helping you with the paperwork and the forms required for it. The recruiter will discuss your opportunities with you, and help you come up with an outline of your plan to reach your goals, based on your interest and experiences.
Before you can take the MEPS you have to pass the initial requirements for candidates for recruitment. The requirements are simple and consist of: age, citizenship, dependents, single parenthood, financial obligations, educational background, drugs and alcohol count, and your medical, legal, and moral standards.
After passing the entrance standards, you can now take the MEPS and the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery test, or the ASVAB. You can opt to go through the Recruit Training program after, or you can wait for a year under Delayed Entry Program, or DEP, if you still have personal businesses to attend to.
It's suggested to take the DEP as an opportunity to exercise before the recruit training. The recruit training, or what they call the bootcamp, won't require you to swim for miles, but it does have its share of rigorous backwork.
Think our seas are unsafe? Become a Navy Recruit now!