AFROTC Program Overview
WHAT IT TAKES
The dedication, the drive, the discipline,
the TRY and the YOU.
We are dedicated to ensuring that all who are willing to embrace and conquer all of the adversity and challenges, will graduate and commission not only as a better individual, but as a different, daring and diverse premier leader who is remarkably qualified to command an elite group of men and women in the world's greatest Air Force and Space Force.
AFROTC is divided into two major programs: the General Military Course (GMC) and the Professional Officer Course (POC).
The General Military Course is offered during the freshman and sophomore years; the course discusses the structure, doctrine, and function of the Air Force, communication skills and the historical role of air and space power.
Admission to the Professional Officer Course is highly competitive. Not anyone can enroll, students must first pass the Air Force Officer Qualifying Test (AFOQT) and an Air Force physical examination, meet academic and physical fitness standards, successfully complete the AFROTC field training program and be selected by a board of Air Force officers. The Professional Officer Course’s first year is leadership theory and practice, Air Force management theory and practice and other aspects of being a professional officer. The Professional Officer Course’s second and final year addresses a broad range of civil/military relations, and the overall social and political context in which U.S. defense policy is formulated and affected.
Leadership Laboratory meets weekly for two hours throughout enrollment in Air Force ROTC. Instruction is conducted within the framework of an Air Force organization with a progression of experience designed to develop students' leadership potential. The cadet physical training program is an essential part of leadership laboratory and is mandatory for all cadets. A detailed introduction and orientation to life on an active Air or Space Force base occurs during a field encampment (field training) between the student’s sophomore and junior years.
Air and Space Force Cadets who are awarded a scholarship must either choose one of the following technical majors or complete 24 credits of technical classes or complete four semesters for a foreign language.
Technical Majors:
- Architecture (Master's Program only)
- Biochemistry
- Chemistry
- Computer Science
- Engineering (any concentration)
- Math (any concentration)
- Physics