ASVAB (GO NAVY!)
moparguy,
I'm currently a United States Navy Recruiter in Lewiston Idaho. I've been in the Navy for 15 years and my real job in the Navy is as an Electronics Technician. The most important part of the process is getting a good score on the ASVAB and then taking a job that he wants to do, not what the Navy wants him to do. The job counselor that he will sit down with after taking the ASVAB and physical has a list of priority jobs that he is instructed to fill. He'll sell these first. Some of the priority jobs are good jobs, electronics, nuke, cryptology tech, etc. A lot on this list are not the best jobs to take. The more technical the job the more college credits he'll earn from his Navy training, which leaves him less time to spend in class finishing up his degree. I can honestly say that the Navy is the best branch of the armed forces for a young single guy who wants the best training available, wants to travel and see a lot of neat places in the world the whole time getting great job experience. Make sure he understands, the recruiter will tell him all the fun/positive things about life in the Navy but he needs to understand that all those benifits are going to come at the cost of hard work. In my opinion, the fun and benifits you gain far outweigh the hard work he'll put in. That is the reason I've chosen to stay around.
If he can score above a 50 on the ASVAB he'll be eligible for the Navy College Fund (NCF) which is now $50,000 to use for college when he gets out. I just put two high school seniors in yesterday and they both got $50,000 NCF for taking jobs leaving in September 2002.
The best thing a parent can do is go with him while he talks to the job counselor. This will not only make the job counselor present some of the better jobs but also you'll be able to explain which jobs are going to be more useful to him later in life. The counselors are very good at talking kids into jobs that won't really benifit them after they leave the military. Never forget, he's not comited until he signs his contract and takes the oath of enlistment. He can walk away from the process at any time if they are not taking care of him.
Worst case senario he goes in for 4 years and hates his job. He'll have gained some work experience, traveled the world, got some college out of the way, maybe saved some money and most importantly have grown up and been taught good decission making skills. The whole time Dad can rest easy knowing his son is doing something positive with his life and not just a kid failing out of college, smoking dope and wasting money on a education that the majority of college kids will never finish.
If you or your son would like to talk just email me and I'll give you my 800 number and I'd be happy to tell you how things work behind the scenes. He can't go wrong joining the United States Navy (just keep him away from the Army).
To the person that said "90% of the people he will meet are full of s**t" couldn't be more wrong. The majority of the people are hard working patriotic professionals with a very demanding job to do. Of course you'll run into the occasional "loser" but the trick is to steer clear of these people and be part of the crowd that is moving up.
I wish your son good luck.
AT1(AW) Ray Trautman
Recruiter In Charge
NRS Lewiston Idaho