
@NPR recently reported that Maryland no longer allows schools to administer the ASVAB to a student without parental approval. This legislation also prevents schools from releasing the test results to military recruiters without parents' or students' permission. The Maryland Coalition to Protect Student Privacy, meanwhile, is advising groups in Wisconsin, Oregon, New Hampshire, Georgia, North Carolina and a few other states to require parents' permission before schools give students the ASVAB or release the results.
Of course parents absolutely have the right to know when their kids are taking the Armed Forces Vocational Aptitude Battery in school! They should also know SAT and ACT testing schedules, as well as when the Homecoming Game and prom are slated. If that’s not happening, then we parents need to get on our schools about better communication (or we need to pay attention to those calendars the schools send us).
Now, is ASVAB testing a threat to privacy, personal safety, or anything else regarding our high schoolers? It does not appear to be. Does its distribution save tax dollars and facilitate a more efficient recruiting process for an all-volunteer force? Perhaps.
It’s not a secret that ASVAB test scores are used to qualify for military service in general, as well as for specific jobs. However, many people don’t realize that ASVAB scores also provide career information for various civilian occupations and can indicate future success in college and vocational schools.
Yes, scores are provided to recruiters – not kidnappers, terrorists, or telemarketers – who may call your home. Scores are also provided to the students’ schools. Before deciding that picking up the phone and declining a recruiter’s offer is not worth the hassle, consider that we citizens already pick up the tab for our recruiters to find a few needles in stack of needles:
· Nearly 75% of the 31.2 million 17-24-year-olds in the U.S. are unqualified for military service due to illegal drug use, mental problems, too many dependents, criminal records, and physical and medical issues.
· 35% (about 1/3) of today’s youth ages 17-24 are unfit for military service due to weight and medical issues alone.
· This leaves only 7.8 million American youth even eligible to serve their country – if they even want to. A majority of these youth grow up not even knowing that the military is an option, much less whether or not they’d qualify.
Even today, with supportive ASVAB testing and score distribution, our tax dollars finance:
· The thousands of recruiters we Americans pay to scour this nation and its territories for the young men and women capable and willing to defend it (about 550 Marine Corps recruiters in the 13 Midwestern states alone).
· The fuel, airline tickets, per diem, lodging, advertising, entry fees for college and job fair booths, and more used to locate and inform interested young Americans about military service.
The more time recruiters waste trying to locate the small percentage of youth who even qualify for military service, the more we pay. Isn't it easier, cheaper, and more efficient to permit our kids to take the test and our schools to provide these scores to recruiters? This way parents know what options are available to their kids, and they can simply tell recruiters "no thank you" if military service is not the right option? Regarding privacy, it seems to me that more personal data is being collected each day by leading search engines and social media sites than will ever be collected from ASVAB test scores. Unfortunately, many of these make it business-as-usual to sell that information to the highest bidder.
There are some great, non-evasive resources for parents to review and make informed decisions before supporting legislation that makes it more costly and time-consuming for their military to connect with those young Americans who, in fact, desire to be well-informed about their career options after both high school and college: Official ASVAB Website, Military.com: About the ASVAB, The ASVAB Exploration Center.
If nothing else, please get the facts before deciding whether or not to support testing and score distribution to recruiters if the issue comes up in your area. Feel free to send us any questions you have, or contact our Midwest Marines recruiting station nearest you.
The last 2010 Midwest Marines Educators Workshop ended today in an awesome way. The final event for our 74 educators was watching a company of new Marines graduate from boot camp in San Diego where four of the six honor graduates, as well as the best marksman and most physically fit Marine, were all recruited by the Midwest Marines!
Stay tuned here and on our webcast page (www.midwestmarineswebcasts.posterous.com) in the coming weeks to see these educators in action and hear what they had to say about the trip.Educators and members of the media who are interested in attending next year's workshops between January and June 2011 should contact a local recruiter soon for more information, as seats tend to fill up fast. More information is also available at www.marines.mil/midwestmarines.
>Captain Eric Tausch
27-minute documentary shows Marine Corps drill instructors behind the scenes. This is a must-see video for every young man and woman who will soon feel the chill of standing in front of the most influential Marine they'll likely encounter.
Educators from Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and the Chicago area were introduced to their drill instructors this morning as part of the Marine Corps Educators Workshop in San Diego. By the end of the day, the teachers, counselors and administrators had experienced the "Yellow Footprints", marched several miles, threw punches at each other and negotiated the bayonet assault course. To follow them through their journey, visit the Midwest Marines Webcasts page for an update every day during the week.
Educators from Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and the Chicago area began their weeklong experience as part of the Marine Corps Educators Workshop in San Diego. To follow them through their journey, visit the Midwest Marines Webcasts page for an update every day during the week.