by doingfine » Sat Mar 31, 2012 4:52 am
Hi All,
After watching the spread of "hater" threads throughout this forum, I've decided to share the story of my POSITIVE experience with the program thus far (including the minor speedbumps of recent developments).
Before I was accepted to the SMART program, I was a different kind of intern for the DoD (didn't pay tuition, but it was a good summer job for a young college student). I wasn't a hugely impressed with the work I was doing, so I applied to the SMART program as a way to explore a different department and to fund the last year of my graduate studies. I had actually received offers entailing superior pay from local companies, but I stayed because the tuition benefits were superior with the SMART program. When my SF got word that I was accepted to the SMART program, I moved to my new team. Having done a small amount of work with my new team before I left for training last summer, I can now say that I've worked in two different groups at my SF as an intern where I not only had work to do, but it was meaningful. Yes, it took forever to get all my accounts and equipment set up, but in both groups once the red tape was out of the way, the work experience was quite enjoyable. I should probably also mention that my SF is NOT an R&D base, so it is possible to get a fun job outside the main hubs of your sponsoring service. The DoD culture is surprisingly flexible - I've already worked on two completely different projects and teams, and I've only been employed here for 3 years. My current supervisor explained the idea as this: the DoD would rather move an employee within the government to keep them happy with their job, than lose them to the private sector, and have wasted all that money training a person for a government job. You really can go wherever you want - if you want to climb to the top, there are real training and leadership opportunities to help you get there (I personally sign up for whatever I can), and having been a SMART scholar is a huge foot in the door. You can also sink to the bottom too and become what I've heard called a "government slug" (i.e. twiddling your thumbs and complaining rather than doing something productive, like going through the MONTHS AND MONTHS of online job-related training all DoD employees have access to, participating in force- or base-wide work initiatives, or my personal favorite, automating mundane tasks).
Now that my rant is out of the way, I'd like to talk actual perks, and not necessarily the ones you always hear government employees get:
- Most bases have a ticket and travel office, which I've used on multiple occasions to save money on Disney tickets and local entertainment. There's also a related website where you can get condos and hotel rooms for a steal.
- Most bases also have a recreation office, where you can rent stuff like boats, bikes, campers, ATVs, etc .. also for a steal.
- My base has a nice gym, where I (and my wife) can work out for free. I honestly hadn't worked out even once during college until I started working for the DoD - now I get PAYED to (a few hours a week).
- 4 hours' vacation every paycheck (6 for me since I'll have 3 years under my belt). ALSO, some facilities (such as mine) offer a pay system called "flex-pay", where you can build a balance of up to 24 hours' vacation by working extra hours, and then spend those saved-up hours whenever you see fit.
- Of course the retirement is decent - I think it's 7% matching, and the funds seem pretty stable, especially if you go for all government bonds.
- There are a LOT of health insurance choices .. not every employer is going to have a plan that is right for you, but if you can't find one that fits at the DoD, you're doing it wrong.
- In the ~18 months I worked for the DoD before I switched to SMART, I had received one bonus (for a proposed process improvement .. I didn't even know the DoD gave bonuses) and two raises - if you perform well, you WILL get payed for it.
- The electronic library is top-notch .. you have free access to Rosetta Stone software for every language. You can also buy steeply discounted Microsoft products and computers through government-only websites.
Lastly, I'd like to address the recent developments with the program. As far as I'm aware, there are no other scholarships out there (especially for undergrads) that just give you cash on top of your tuition without requiring you to lift a finger, so regardless of the amount of funding, it still trumps most other offerings in my books. And with the removal of the restriction on outside funding, those of you who think you deserve more money can go out there and get that money now! So rather than complain about the people who are paying you to go to school and promising a job after you graduate, perhaps you could just try to MAKE IT WORK - that's precisely what the SPO doing by changing the internship support payments!
Anyways, if you, like me, have enjoyed your SMART/DoD experience, this is the place to talk about it. I can't be the only one who's happy with my decision.
Hi All,
After watching the spread of "hater" threads throughout this forum, I've decided to share the story of my POSITIVE experience with the program thus far (including the minor speedbumps of recent developments).
Before I was accepted to the SMART program, I was a different kind of intern for the DoD (didn't pay tuition, but it was a good summer job for a young college student). I wasn't a hugely impressed with the work I was doing, so I applied to the SMART program as a way to explore a different department and to fund the last year of my graduate studies. I had actually received offers entailing superior pay from local companies, but I stayed because the tuition benefits were superior with the SMART program. When my SF got word that I was accepted to the SMART program, I moved to my new team. Having done a small amount of work with my new team before I left for training last summer, I can now say that I've worked in two different groups at my SF as an intern where I not only had work to do, but it was meaningful. Yes, it took forever to get all my accounts and equipment set up, but in both groups once the red tape was out of the way, the work experience was quite enjoyable. I should probably also mention that my SF is NOT an R&D base, so it is possible to get a fun job outside the main hubs of your sponsoring service. The DoD culture is surprisingly flexible - I've already worked on two completely different projects and teams, and I've only been employed here for 3 years. My current supervisor explained the idea as this: the DoD would rather move an employee within the government to keep them happy with their job, than lose them to the private sector, and have wasted all that money training a person for a government job. You really can go wherever you want - if you want to climb to the top, there are real training and leadership opportunities to help you get there (I personally sign up for whatever I can), and having been a SMART scholar is a huge foot in the door. You can also sink to the bottom too and become what I've heard called a "government slug" (i.e. twiddling your thumbs and complaining rather than doing something productive, like going through the MONTHS AND MONTHS of online job-related training all DoD employees have access to, participating in force- or base-wide work initiatives, or my personal favorite, automating mundane tasks).
Now that my rant is out of the way, I'd like to talk actual perks, and not necessarily the ones you always hear government employees get:
- Most bases have a ticket and travel office, which I've used on multiple occasions to save money on Disney tickets and local entertainment. There's also a related website where you can get condos and hotel rooms for a steal.
- Most bases also have a recreation office, where you can rent stuff like boats, bikes, campers, ATVs, etc .. also for a steal.
- My base has a nice gym, where I (and my wife) can work out for free. I honestly hadn't worked out even once during college until I started working for the DoD - now I get PAYED to (a few hours a week).
- 4 hours' vacation every paycheck (6 for me since I'll have 3 years under my belt). ALSO, some facilities (such as mine) offer a pay system called "flex-pay", where you can build a balance of up to 24 hours' vacation by working extra hours, and then spend those saved-up hours whenever you see fit.
- Of course the retirement is decent - I think it's 7% matching, and the funds seem pretty stable, especially if you go for all government bonds.
- There are a LOT of health insurance choices .. not every employer is going to have a plan that is right for you, but if you can't find one that fits at the DoD, you're doing it wrong.
- In the ~18 months I worked for the DoD before I switched to SMART, I had received one bonus (for a proposed process improvement .. I didn't even know the DoD gave bonuses) and two raises - if you perform well, you WILL get payed for it.
- The electronic library is top-notch .. you have free access to Rosetta Stone software for every language. You can also buy steeply discounted Microsoft products and computers through government-only websites.
Lastly, I'd like to address the recent developments with the program. As far as I'm aware, there are no other scholarships out there (especially for undergrads) that just give you cash on top of your tuition without requiring you to lift a finger, so regardless of the amount of funding, it still trumps most other offerings in my books. And with the removal of the restriction on outside funding, those of you who think you deserve more money can go out there and get that money now! So rather than complain about the people who are paying you to go to school and promising a job after you graduate, perhaps you could just try to MAKE IT WORK - that's precisely what the SPO doing by changing the internship support payments!
Anyways, if you, like me, have enjoyed your SMART/DoD experience, this is the place to talk about it. I can't be the only one who's happy with my decision.