Posted on Oct 30, 2018
Is it possible to attend OCS prior to completing a Bachelors degree?
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By the end of next year I plan to complete my bachelors degree, attend OCS, and commission into the USAR.
I have heard a couple of times that it is possible to apply for, and even attend, OCS prior to completing you degree, once you complete 90 credits towards your degree.
Is this still a valid program or a thing of the past?
I have heard a couple of times that it is possible to apply for, and even attend, OCS prior to completing you degree, once you complete 90 credits towards your degree.
Is this still a valid program or a thing of the past?
Posted 6 y ago
Responses: 10
Yes, that is still valid. I just graduated last month from the Guard OCS program. They're all federally recognized of course, however the reserve and guard programs will allow admission with a min of 90 hrs college credit. Go for it!
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CPT (Join to see)
Came here to say this exact thing. I've never met anybody who did it, but a friend of mine explained doing State OCS over the course of Senior year of college as kind of an "ideal" timeline for those still in college that want to do OCS. Of course, the same requirement applies equally to other commissioning sources, regardless of ability to earn your commission while working on your degree separately. My Commander at my last Company commissioned after being an E-7, got his Bachelor's Degree a few years later before pinning on his Captain's Bars. Technically you only need the Bachelor's Degree to make O-3 and can Commission with the 90 credits, though in practice a degree is kind of expected. Definitely go for it!
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SPC (Join to see)
Do you just need a total of 90 credits or do you need 90 credits that are going towards your specific degree?
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I believe someone I was in BOLC with in 2016 went through OCS and does not have a degree so I would say yes.
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As things stand right now, applying for OCS on the Reserve side without a bachelor's degree will not net positive results. Continue your education, work on your GPA and APFT, then move forward with the application process. Best of luck to you!
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