by Guest » Tue Aug 11, 2015 9:11 am
DocSea wrote:As I'm sure you're aware through reading this board and SMART's literature, the SMART program is NOT a "free money" scholarship. You WILL be expected to serve at a specific DoD facility upon your graduation, regardless of if you wish to pursue graduate school or other opportunities. This can be a good or bad thing, depending upon your situation. On one hand, its a guaranteed job. On the other, it can sometimes be a very unfulfilling commitment (see other threads on this board).
Except, as mentioned in other threads, it's actually not a guaranteed job. The sponsoring facility which selects you is under no obligation to offer you a job when you are ready to graduate. They have a hiring authority given to them by congressional law, and that's an option they can CHOOSE to use in the event they want to hire you into federal service without a lot of red tape. But if they decide against hiring you, they will tell the SMART Program Office to go pound sand and the scholarship recipient is left as a pawn in the center of two bureaucracies.
The unfortunate part, however, is the SMART Program Office will treat the scholarship recipient as though they did something to put their "guaranteed job" in jeopardy, and come after the scholar with repayment threats/demands. This behavior will happen regardless of whether or not the SMART Program Office knows that political games are being played at the sponsor facility (i.e. hiring freezes, management tussles, funding cuts to departments, etc.). All these examples are well out of the recipient's control, yet the SMART Program has a path of recourse against the scholar that they do not have against the sponsor facility, so the scholar will take the brunt of the blame.
[quote="DocSea"]As I'm sure you're aware through reading this board and SMART's literature, the SMART program is NOT a "free money" scholarship. You WILL be expected to serve at a specific DoD facility upon your graduation, regardless of if you wish to pursue graduate school or other opportunities. This can be a good or bad thing, depending upon your situation. [b]On one hand, its a guaranteed job.[/b] On the other, it can sometimes be a very unfulfilling commitment (see other threads on this board).[/quote]
Except, as mentioned in other threads, it's actually not a guaranteed job. The sponsoring facility which selects you is under no obligation to offer you a job when you are ready to graduate. They have a hiring authority given to them by congressional law, and that's an option they can CHOOSE to use in the event they want to hire you into federal service without a lot of red tape. But if they decide against hiring you, they will tell the SMART Program Office to go pound sand and the scholarship recipient is left as a pawn in the center of two bureaucracies.
The unfortunate part, however, is the SMART Program Office will treat the scholarship recipient as though they did something to put their "guaranteed job" in jeopardy, and come after the scholar with repayment threats/demands. This behavior will happen regardless of whether or not the SMART Program Office knows that political games are being played at the sponsor facility (i.e. hiring freezes, management tussles, funding cuts to departments, etc.). All these examples are well out of the recipient's control, yet the SMART Program has a path of recourse against the scholar that they do not have against the sponsor facility, so the scholar will take the brunt of the blame.