<p>National Science honor society-member
Maryland Technology honor society-member
National Honor society-member
Finance and Investment club- president
Future Business Leaders of America-member
Cross country- 3 years
JV soccer- 1 year
club soccer- 9 years
Varsity track- 2 years
Model UN- member
Civil Air Patrol- Technical Sergeant
Robotics club (STEM)</p>
<p>AP’s (1 junior year, 4 senior year)</p>
<p>AP Calc 1
AP English 11
AP English 12
AP Statistics
AP Chem
AP psychology </p>
<p>Rest of my courses were G/T and honors, no regs</p>
<p>Completed the project lead the way engineering academy</p>
<p>I’d say you are competitive. How much? I don’t really know. Those seem like decent stats (accounting for low freshman GPA). That said, things vary. I know one guy who is brilliant, but didn’t get an AFROTC scholarship. Made USAFA and got a PhD scholarship out of there. </p>
<p>Do your best, and let the chips fall where they may.</p>
<p>I went through the process 30 years ago. Didn’t get scholarship but joined rotc anyway. Scores are low for aerospace. Choice of school matters too. More about quotas at each school. Interview is highly important as well. Guidance office should have forms. Google rotc scholarship and there is probably more detail on process. Good luck.</p>
<p>I think your chances are very good, but not a “slam dunk.” The aerospace engineering major will help you get the scholarship. Air Force wants engineering majors, especially AE. Non-STEM majors are mostly out of the question.</p>
<p>Remember, about 80% of of AFROTC scholarships are only for in-state universities. The good news is that you get to choose what college to take your AFROTC scholarship to. Hope you live in a state with good state universities.</p>