An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs

This thesis conducts an extensive literature review of prior studies on the three major commissioning programs for United States naval officers --the United States Naval Academy, Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, and Officer Candidate School. Three areas are covered: historical patterns in offi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lehner, William D.
Other Authors: Horner, Donald H., Jr.
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4209
id ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-4209
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-42092014-11-27T16:05:07Z An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs Lehner, William D. Horner, Donald H., Jr. Mehay, Stephen L. Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) This thesis conducts an extensive literature review of prior studies on the three major commissioning programs for United States naval officers --the United States Naval Academy, Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, and Officer Candidate School. Three areas are covered: historical patterns in officer accessions and historical changes in Navy pre-commissioning training and education philosophy and policy; cost comparisons of the three major commissioning programs; and comparisons of job performance of junior and field grade officers from each program. The primary purpose of this research is to derive the implications for current Navy accession policies with respect to officer commissioning programs. The analysis finds that the Naval Academy has been and continues to be the primary source of officer accessions during periods of reduced officer requirements in the Navy. Additionally, it finds that, while all naval officers perform superbly, U.S. Naval Academy graduates generally tend to have an advantage in performance during various points of their career. Due to this retention and performance differential, the larger initial cost of the education of Naval Academy graduates tends to yield a positive return to the Navy over an officer's career. Recommendations include operating the Naval Academy at full capacity, while maintaining the necessary flow of ROTC and OCS graduates. 2012-03-14T17:41:04Z 2012-03-14T17:41:04Z 2008-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4209 227344144 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description This thesis conducts an extensive literature review of prior studies on the three major commissioning programs for United States naval officers --the United States Naval Academy, Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, and Officer Candidate School. Three areas are covered: historical patterns in officer accessions and historical changes in Navy pre-commissioning training and education philosophy and policy; cost comparisons of the three major commissioning programs; and comparisons of job performance of junior and field grade officers from each program. The primary purpose of this research is to derive the implications for current Navy accession policies with respect to officer commissioning programs. The analysis finds that the Naval Academy has been and continues to be the primary source of officer accessions during periods of reduced officer requirements in the Navy. Additionally, it finds that, while all naval officers perform superbly, U.S. Naval Academy graduates generally tend to have an advantage in performance during various points of their career. Due to this retention and performance differential, the larger initial cost of the education of Naval Academy graduates tends to yield a positive return to the Navy over an officer's career. Recommendations include operating the Naval Academy at full capacity, while maintaining the necessary flow of ROTC and OCS graduates.
author2 Horner, Donald H., Jr.
author_facet Horner, Donald H., Jr.
Lehner, William D.
author Lehner, William D.
spellingShingle Lehner, William D.
An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs
author_sort Lehner, William D.
title An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs
title_short An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs
title_full An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs
title_fullStr An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of Naval Officer accession programs
title_sort analysis of naval officer accession programs
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4209
work_keys_str_mv AT lehnerwilliamd ananalysisofnavalofficeraccessionprograms
AT lehnerwilliamd analysisofnavalofficeraccessionprograms
_version_ 1716720960802914304