Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - University rankings - Is it okay for 88-year-old undergraduates to join the army and take the military school exam?
Is it okay for 88-year-old undergraduates to join the army and take the military school exam?
First of all. Generally speaking, the army recruits volunteers in colleges and universities mainly freshmen and sophomores. You should first ask the armed forces department of your school if you can go as a junior.

Second, you haven't graduated from undergraduate course yet, and you haven't got a degree certificate yet. There is basically no discount. At most, the tuition will be halved when you come back. It would be better if I went after graduation.

Third, soldiers must be under the age of 22 to take the military school exam, and if they fail in the first year, they must be in the second year. You only have one chance to enroll students from colleges and universities. If you fail, you will come back. Do the math yourself. Even if admitted, because there is no degree, I have to go to school for another four years from my freshman year. That is to say, your local university spent three years in vain. If you have a degree certificate, you only need to train for six months to one year.

Fourth, the undergraduate course is only an upper middle school student in the army. There is no shortage of undergraduates in the army now, so if you want to go, you must not be proud, and you must work hard honestly.

Fifth. I was born in 1988, and now I am a senior. I will graduate next June. I'm also going to recruit people next winter. Not now, because you are nothing without that degree certificate. I suggest you consider it, too.