Building a Midshipman: How to Crack the USNA Application
Publisher :
Structured Learning
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You don't have to be a miracle-worker to the 10% of applicants accepted to a military academy, but you do need a plan. For the thousands of students who apply every year--and slog through the numbing concatenation of decisions preceding a nomination--there is no greater discouragement than the likely event that they will fail. This, though, is the Board's peek into an applicant's moral fiber and an important ingredient to the go/no go decision. In the words of James Stockdale, USNA '46 and Medal of Honor Winner: "The test of character is not 'hanging in there' when you expect a light at the end of the tunnel, but performance of duty and persistence of example when you know that no light is coming." This is the true story of Maggie Schmidt, an All-American kid who dreamt of attending the Naval Academy when her research into the typical Midshipman uncovered a profile alarmingly like herself. This book describes her background and academic interests, her focus, as well as her struggle to put together a winning admissions package. Along the way, you gain insight into the moral fiber that grounds everything she does and the decisions she must make that some consider impossible for an adolescent, but are achievable for thousands of like-minded teens. This workbook walks you through the long process, provides check lists of everything required, decision making matrices, goal-setting exercises to determine if USNA is a good fit for you, and a mix of motivation and academic advice to balance a decision that rightfully might be the biggest one most teens have ever made. See the publisher's website at structuredlearning.net for more details.
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Description |
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You don't have to be a miracle-worker to the 10% of applicants accepted
to a military academy, but you do need a plan. For the thousands of
students who apply every year--and slog through the numbing
concatenation of decisions preceding a nomination--there is no greater
discouragement than the likely event that they will fail. This, though,
is the Board's peek into an applicant's moral fiber and an important
ingredient to the go/no go decision. In the words of James Stockdale,
USNA '46 and Medal of Honor Winner: "The test of character is not
'hanging in there' when you expect a light at the end of the tunnel, but
performance of duty and persistence of example when you know that no
light is coming." This is the true story of Maggie Schmidt, an
All-American kid who dreamt of attending the Naval Academy when her
research into the typical Midshipman uncovered a profile alarmingly like
herself. This book describes her background and academic interests, her
focus, as well as her struggle to put together a winning admissions
package. Along the way, you gain insight into the moral fiber that
grounds everything she does and the decisions she must make that some
consider impossible for an adolescent, but are achievable for thousands
of like-minded teens. This workbook walks you through the long process,
provides check lists of everything required, decision making matrices,
goal-setting exercises to determine if USNA is a good fit for you, and a
mix of motivation and academic advice to balance a decision that
rightfully might be the biggest one most teens have ever made. See the
publisher's website at structuredlearning.net for more details.
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Praise and Reviews |
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Real Basics, November
17, 2007
I bought this book for my son who wants to apply to the Naval Academy.
There are books out there to explain service academies, but not how to
get accepted. It has so many steps, it's confusing to keep track of.
This book not only explained why the military makes it difficult, but
the step-by-steps needed to be accepted. It is told through the eyes of a
successful applicant and makes the reader believe anyone has a chance
if they follow this guide.
It has chapters on how she started, the goals she set, why she
picked USNA, the steps she took each year in high school from freshman
to senior. It talks about her experiences with her Blue and Gold
officer, the congressional interview process, how she resolved problems
in her application package. A timeline tells you when she did what, what
her grades were throughout the application process, how she prepared
herself for Plebe summer, how and when she accomplished the myriad
steps. It has check lists, examples of application materials, her
application resume and explanations on how to solve certain problems
that come up. Like the medical examination by DoDMERB. A family friend
was disqualified at this exam, and this book explains what to do if you
have a problem.
This would help anyone applying to any of the service
academies--West Point, USAFA, USNA, Coast Guard--as well as anyone
trying to get into an Ivy League. There are books on getting into every
other highly-competitive college. I can't believe this hasn't been
written before.
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