Seafort
Made His Bed, Is Now Lying In It
4/c = Fourth Class Midshipman, or Freshman.
1/c = First Class Midshipman, or Senior.
I imagine you can figure out what 3/c and 2/c stand for. And it will only matter for Advanced Standing or Scholarship. If it's gone, it will show up in your history prior to undergoing medical evaluation, and it will be ignored. If it shows up as a problem, you will probably be denied Advanced Standing even as a 2/C. At that point, you will pretty much be separated from the program because you cannot fulfill the requirements of military service on medical grounds.
I saw folks get hurt, lose their AS or scholarship. I saw girls who got pregnant lose AS or their scholarship, or just not get it in the first place. I've seen people denied AS because some unknown medical condition lurked silently in the background.
tl;dr We aren't doctors. Go talk to yours. If he or she says you're good to go, take that note with you to NROTC and talk to the 4/c advisor at your NROTC unit.
I was a Junior, credit wise, before I became a 4/c. As long as I didn't cost the Navy more money than any other Mid, I was free to come onboard. My 4/C advisor was also a helo pilot, and just a damn stand up guy in general. Neither here nor there, just thought he deserved the shoutout.
1/c = First Class Midshipman, or Senior.
I imagine you can figure out what 3/c and 2/c stand for. And it will only matter for Advanced Standing or Scholarship. If it's gone, it will show up in your history prior to undergoing medical evaluation, and it will be ignored. If it shows up as a problem, you will probably be denied Advanced Standing even as a 2/C. At that point, you will pretty much be separated from the program because you cannot fulfill the requirements of military service on medical grounds.
I saw folks get hurt, lose their AS or scholarship. I saw girls who got pregnant lose AS or their scholarship, or just not get it in the first place. I've seen people denied AS because some unknown medical condition lurked silently in the background.
tl;dr We aren't doctors. Go talk to yours. If he or she says you're good to go, take that note with you to NROTC and talk to the 4/c advisor at your NROTC unit.
I was a Junior, credit wise, before I became a 4/c. As long as I didn't cost the Navy more money than any other Mid, I was free to come onboard. My 4/C advisor was also a helo pilot, and just a damn stand up guy in general. Neither here nor there, just thought he deserved the shoutout.