<p>I understand the cadets received their AFOQT scores recently.</p>
<p>I was just wondering if these scores are used for anything important, or if they are simply used to see how the cadets do in relation to ROTC, OTS and other commissioning sources.</p>
<p>Believe it or not, unlike 2010, the AFOQT actually counts towards the BOM scores of 2011 and beyond. That makes it not totally meaningless, but it still certainly wasn’t the highlight of my cadet career.</p>
<p>That is probably they have acknowledged that the pilot pipeline will be slowing down, hence the AFOQT has a portion that is designed for pilot ability and most likely be used as a make or break between the bottom tier regarding UPT</p>
<p>There will be people that study for it and people who walk in cold…just like the SAT, however in the end of the day your gpa, rank and recs will mean more than your AFOQT score…unless it is really bad, then nothing will help since there is a min, but I think it is really low like 80. </p>
<p>Side note, again this is when being math/science orientated will help you, along with those that have a ppl, since there are questions that are targeted to flying.</p>
<p>wow 80 out of 99 is considered “really low”? What is the average then?</p>
<p>I would think the majority of cadets taking the test have no prior flying experience and wouldn’t have super high scores on the portion related to flying.</p>
<p>Haha, however much fun I get out of making fun of hornet’s brainiac nature, he’s right on this one. Everyone I talked to scored an average of over 80 (many in the low to mid 90s).</p>
<p>I don’t know of anyone that was in the 70s (I know there were, but none of my friends were). My scores were something like 99, 99, 99, 97, 94. I DO NOT do well on standardized tests, so that tells me it was easier if I did that well.</p>