The Air Force Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (AFROTC) at the University of Virginia affords students the opportunity to receive U.S. Air Force officer training while completing undergraduate or graduate studies. AFROTC is the largest of the Air Force’s three commissioning programs.
Address
Department of Air Science
Astronomy Building
University of Virginia
P.O. Box 400188
Charlottesville, VA 22904-4188
(434) 924-6832 Fax: 982-2842
Toll Free: 877-UVA-USAF (877) 882-8723
afrotc@virginia.edu
http://airforce.virginia.edu
AFROTC offers commissioning opportunities for students at all academic levels, both undergraduate and graduate. The full four-year program is designed for students who join during their first year of college. These students take all four years of Air Science classes and attend a four-week summer field training encampment at an Air Force base between their second and third years. Additional voluntary summer training programs are offered between the 1st and 2nd and the 3rd and 4th years.
Students may also enroll during their second year of college. Those students can dual enroll in both the AIRS 1000- and AIRS 2000-level courses during their second year of college and attend a four-week summer field training encampment. Another option is to only take the AIRS 2000-level courses and attend a six-week summer field training encampment.
It is possible for undergraduate students in their junior and senior years, as well as graduate students, to enroll in AFROTC, but only with special arrangements. Such students should contact the Department of Air Science to discuss their options.
Unless a student earns an AFROTC scholarship, no service obligation is incurred during the first two years of the four-year program. However, all students who enter into the last two years of the AFROTC program, called the Professional Officer Course (POC), enter into a contractual obligation with the Air Force to serve on active duty upon commissioning.
After graduation and commissioning as second lieutenants in the Air Force, many graduates serve in a variety of career fields with a four-year active duty service commitment. Interested and qualified students may compete to become Air Force pilots or navigators. Successful pilot and navigator candidates serve ten and six year active duty service commitments, respectively. Active duty may be delayed after graduation for those who wish to immediately pursue a graduate degree or other special programs—these are worked on a
case-by-case basis.