Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Student soldiers

2 state universiti­es aiming to restart ROTC.

- AZIZA MUSA

University of the Ozarks President Richard Dunsworth was at an alumni event some two years ago when he heard of a colonel who was soon retiring from the Missouri National Guard.

To his surprise, he learned Col. David Lowe got his start at the Clarksvill­e university’s ROTC program in the mid1980s.

And so the president’s questions began. Mainly he wondered whether ROTC programs could potentiall­y serve the university’s students.

Now, the University of the Ozarks is one of two Arkansas universiti­es looking to kick-start ROTC programs on their campuses. It has restarted the program this spring in collaborat­ion with the University of Central Arkansas, while the University of Arkansas at Little Rock is hoping to ramp up its program’s enrollment as well.

Only 19 of the state’s 47 public and private colleges and universiti­es offer the Army ROTC program through four host institutio­ns — the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le; the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff; Arkansas State University; and UCA. (UA is also the only one in Arkansas to offer an Air Force ROTC program.)

Many higher education institutio­ns boasted their own Army programs, but many fell off the grid beginning in the 1990s with the drawdown of the military, said Lt. Col. James Welch, the chairman of the department of military science and leadership at UCA. Other higher education leaders in the state suspect that some of their own programs were discontinu­ed because of low enrollment.

And yet others — such as the University of Arkansas at Monticello and Arkansas State University-Mountain Home — now have defunct programs because of retirement­s or reassignme­nts of

the locally stationed officer.

Still, Arkansas ranks 27th in the nation in collegiate ROTC program enrollment. This year, it has 381 students of the nation’s 29,790, according to Army Cadet Command data, and it is currently on par with enrollment expectatio­ns.

Enrollment in collegiate ROTC programs closely correlates with the drawdown or buildup of the military — but with about a 2-½ year lag time, said Lt. Col. Jeremy Reihl, chief of the Operations Analysis Division in Cadet Command.

Troop levels — and those of ROTC programs — are not directly tied to mission requiremen­ts, such as wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n, said Rosie Heiss, senior defense adviser for U.S. Sen. John Boozman. She added troop levels — or end strengths — are driven more by the National Defense Strategy.

“Since 2001, [the Department of Defense] was engaged in a counterins­urgency-style of combat operations,” she said. “The National Security Strategy and the National Military Strategy now have us refocused on major theater warfare against nearpeer competitor­s, which will shift our military requiremen­ts and thus personnel levels. Now that we are refocusing on major theater war, troop levels are increasing.”

For 2018, the Army is set to increase its active duty troops by 16,000, she said, and one of its main officer pools is through collegiate ROTC programs. The state’s programs have commission­ed an average of 58 officers a year over the past five years, leaving Arkansas 32nd in the nation, Cadet Command data show.

Lieutenant colonels at Arkansas’ other host institutio­ns said they did not know of other schools that wanted to start or restart ROTC programs. Even a school wanted to, host institutio­ns would have to review the distances and available resources to ensure the program would be feasible, said Lt. Col. Brian Mason, senior assistant professor of military science at ASU.

Welch of UCA — which has partnershi­ps with eight higher education institutio­ns in Arkansas — said the troop increase means ROTC programs will have to commission more second lieutenant­s.

“This doesn’t necessaril­y change our current recruiting strategy as the key will be to ensure students at all eight of our campuses know about the opportunit­ies that ROTC has to offer,” he said.

ROTC programs offer cadets scholarshi­ps, stipends for books and fees and monthly living allowances.

Some schools offer other benefits on top of that. At ASU, cadets have a living learning community — a “dormitory” building which includes single-occupancy rooms — designated just for those in ROTC programs, Mason said, adding its program also has a dedicated athletic trainer. At University of the Ozarks, officials have institutio­nal scholarshi­ps for housing and food for ROTC students, and it will also provide those students transporta­tion to and from Arkansas Tech University in Russellvil­le, where the Clarksvill­e students will take the military science courses.

University of the Ozarks leaders said the program seemed to complement what the school was already doing — focusing on student success and ensuring that students persist and eventually graduate with a degree. Students in ROTC have higher graduation rates — to be commission­ed, students need to earn bachelor’s degree — and have demonstrat­ed leadership, Dunsworth, the university’s president, said.

“They have sound character, sound mind, and they’re good citizens,” he said. “We thought if we could find opportunit­ies for those students, it would be easier to recruit that exceptiona­l student here.”

The university has enrolled three students this spring, said Reggie Hill, the school’s assistant vice president for advancemen­t and director of enrollment management. It hopes to enroll between six and 10 students a year afterward, Dunsworth said.

At UALR, Kathy Oliverio, the director of military student success, said the school used to have a “vibrant” program but it “just disappeare­d” around 2011 and 2012. And she said she doesn’t know why. Four students who were in the program then had to finish up at UCA.

Oliverio, who has been with the university for a decade, said she pushed to get the program back and that it has been an affiliate school with UCA for about two years now. The university has sent out informatio­nal emails and used social media to push the military science classes it now offers, she said.

“We’ll get one or two people interested,” she said, adding that she believed North Little Rock High School has the highest junior ROTC program in the state. “This semester has probably been our best semester. We had 6 students.”

This year, UCA tried a new initiative, teaching freshmen courses at UALR for students at that campus and Philander Smith College, Welch said. The effort means that Little Rock students don’t need to drive to Conway to take the military science courses or participat­e in athletic or other activities, he said.

Getting more students for the ROTC program will allow UALR to build up the upperclass­men military science courses, Oliverio said.

“We have Maj. [Eric] Weatherman, who is a certified ROTC faculty member, and he comes down from UCA, but it would be nice to have enough students to support him with someone else permanentl­y here at UA Little Rock,” she said. “We want students, and we are building it. And if they come, it will continue.”

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE ?? Cadet squad leader Brooks Boshears (center) gives instructio­ns to fellow University of Central Arkansas ROTC cadets during a training exercise on Feb. 1 at the UCA intramural fields in Conway.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE Cadet squad leader Brooks Boshears (center) gives instructio­ns to fellow University of Central Arkansas ROTC cadets during a training exercise on Feb. 1 at the UCA intramural fields in Conway.
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 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE ?? Cadet Alexander Propes (right), a junior at the University of Central Arkansas, leads a flanking maneuver with ROTC cadets during a training exercise on Feb. 1 at UCA in Conway.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE Cadet Alexander Propes (right), a junior at the University of Central Arkansas, leads a flanking maneuver with ROTC cadets during a training exercise on Feb. 1 at UCA in Conway.

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