Table of Contents
- 1 What three incentives does the military present to teens that would particularly interest poorer students?
- 2 How many children have one or both parents that currently serve in our nation’s military?
- 3 Who is more likely to be married in the military?
- 4 What happens to military families?
- 5 How do military deployments affect children’s mental health?
- 6 What is it like to be a child of military parents?
What three incentives does the military present to teens that would particularly interest poorer students?
Tuition assistance, college credits for military training and experience. Post-9/11 GI Bill.
How many children have one or both parents that currently serve in our nation’s military?
Did you know that: Approximately two million military children have experienced a parental deployment since 2001. There are currently 1.2 million military children of active duty members worldwide.
What are some of the challenges military families face today?
According to the annual Military Family Lifestyle Survey from Blue Star Families released on Wednesday, the top five concerns from the survey were military spouse employment, time spent away from the family, their children’s’ education, stability of the family, and lack of control over military careers.
Who is more likely to be married in the military?
Within the Department of Defense, women make up 16\% of the active duty force and 20\% of the Selected Reserve. Compared to male military members, female military members are less likely to be married, more likely to get divorced, and more likely to be married to another military member.
What happens to military families?
What happens to military families when a service member is deployed? In study after study, deployment has been associated with poorer mental health in military families, behavioral problems in children, a higher risk of divorce, and higher rates of suicide.
Do military kids have the same problems in civilian life?
Many of the issues practitioners see in military kids – attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression, mood disorders and personality issues – may have little or nothing to do with their military upbringings, the experts stressed. Most of the time, the same kids would have the same issues in the civilian world.
How do military deployments affect children’s mental health?
While most military children are doing well and are incredibly resilient, experts say about 30 percent start to show signs of distress after multiple, back-to-back parental deployments. Common problems include anxiety, depression, poor grades and ris… (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
What is it like to be a child of military parents?
It is scary. It is easy for kids to lose their way. And life can become harder and scarier when kids have to move every three years or when their parents miss portions of their childhoods because they are regularly deployed. And it becomes twice as hard when those parents come home changed from post-traumatic stress or traumatic brain injuries.
Is it hard to transition from the Marine Corps to civilian life?
But he notes that the transition to civilian life has been much more difficult for some of his peers who aren’t able to create a separate life from the Marine Corps. “You get used to everything being in lockstep and then all of a sudden you have to create that routine for yourself,” he said.