<p>What's the chance of getting in if NROTC will be paying TUITION in full?</p>
<p>I don't think NROTC scholarships would impact Georgetown in any way. On a completely irrelevant thought, NROTC is run by another University in the Consortium, I think.</p>
<p>I know only Army is located at Georgetown.</p>
<p>Yeah. GW runs the NROTC unit in DC.</p>
<p>I have the same question about all ROTC scholarships.</p>
<p>Being in ROTC has NO EFFECT whatsoever on your admission.</p>
<p>How do you know that information?</p>
<p>Why would that in ANY way impact Gtown's decision to admit a student. And I would know because I was seriously thinking of doing AFROTC, and they said that the colleges did not take it into account when determining admission.</p>
<p>On the NROTC application you list your top five colleges in order of preference. Once you get the scholarship, you are assigned a NROTC unit out of those 5. It is completely up to you to get admitted to the school.</p>
<p>If you are awarded an ROTC scholarship, the service (navy, army) really wants you to attend that college. They lobby for you, in a sense, to try to get you admitted. It is sort of like having a coach or a professor who really wants you. It won't get you in if you aren't qualified for admission, but it is one more thing in your favor. Colleges know that ROTC scholarship awardees are highly likely to succeed through four years of college. First, the money is guaranteed by ROTC. Second, if you are having academic difficulty, your fellow ROTC members will help you with your studies. SO, it will have some impact -- although not a guarantee by any means.</p>