Military academy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A graduation parade of the Royal Military College, Duntroon
The United States Air Force Academy's 2020 graduation, where the first new officers were commissioned into the United States Space Force
Armenian soldiers at the Vazgen Sargsyan Military University in 2013

A military academy or service academy (in the United States) is an educational institution which prepares candidates for service in the officer corps. It normally provides education in a military environment, the exact definition depending on the country concerned.

Three types of academy exist: pre-collegiate-level institutions awarding academic qualifications, university-level institutions awarding bachelor's-degree-level qualifications, and those preparing Officer Cadets for commissioning into the armed services of the state.

A naval academy is either a type of military academy (in the broad sense of that term) or is distinguished from one (in the narrow sense). In U.S. usage, the United States Military Academy, the United States Naval Academy, and the United States Air Force Academy serve as military academies under the categorization of service academies in that country.

History[]

The first military academies were established in the 18th century to provide future officers for technically specialized corps, such as military engineers and artillery, with scientific training.

The Italian Military Academy was inaugurated in Turin on January the 1st, 1678 as the Savoy Royal Academy, making it the oldest military academy in existence.[1] The Royal Danish Naval Academy was set up in 1701.[2] The Royal Military Academy, Woolwich was set up in 1741, after a false start in 1720 because of a lack of funds,[3] as the earliest military academy in Britain. Its original purpose was to train cadets entering the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers. In France, the École Royale du Génie at Mézières was founded in 1748, followed by a non-technical academy in 1751, the École Royale Militaire offering a general military education to the nobility. French military academies were widely copied in Prussia, Austria, Russia. The Norwegian Military Academy in Oslo, educates officers of the Norwegian Army. The academy was established in 1750, and is the oldest institution for higher education in Norway.

By the turn of the century, under the impetus of the Napoleonic Wars and the strain that the armies of Europe subsequently came under, military academies for the training of commissioned officers of the army were set up in most of the combatant nations. These military schools had two functions: to provide instruction for serving officers in the functions of the efficient staff-officer, and to school youngsters before they gained an officer's commission.[4] The Kriegsakademie in Prussia was founded in 1801 and the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr was created by order of Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802 as a replacement for the École Royale Militaire of the Ancien Régime (the institution that Napoleon himself had graduated from).

The Royal Military College, Sandhurst, in England was the brainchild of John Le Marchant in 1801,[5] who established schools for the military instruction of officers at High Wycombe and Great Marlow, with a grant of £30,000 from Parliament. The two original departments were later combined and moved to Sandhurst.

In the United States, the United States Military Academy (USMA) in West Point, New York was founded on March 16, 1802, and is one of five service academies in the nation.

Types[]

Pre-collegiate institutions[]

A military school teaches children of various ages (elementary school, middle school or high school) in a military environment which includes training in military aspects, such as drill. Many military schools are also boarding schools, and others are simply magnet schools in a larger school system. Many are privately run institutions, though some are public and are run either by a public school system (such as the Chicago Public Schools) or by a state.

A common misconception results because some states have chosen to house their juvenile criminal populations in higher-security boarding schools that are run in a manner similar to military boarding schools. These are also called reform schools, and are functionally a combination of school and prison. They attempt to emulate the environment of military boarding schools in the belief that a strict structured environment can reform these children. This may or may not be true. However, their environment and target population are different from those of military schools.[6]

Popular culture sometimes shows parents sending or threatening to send unruly children off to military school (or boarding school) to teach them good behavior (e.g. in the "Army of One" episode of The Sopranos, Tony and Carmela Soprano consider sending their son, AJ, to the Hudson Military Institute; a similar situation appears in Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure), while other fictional depictions don't show military academies as threats or punishment (e.g. Damien: Omen II and The Presidio).

Adult institutions[]

A college-level military academy is an institute of higher learning of things military. It is part of a larger system of military education and training institutions. The primary educational goal at military academies is to provide a high quality education that includes significant coursework and training in the fields of military tactics and military strategy. The amount of non-military coursework varies by both the institution and the country, and the amount of practical military experience gained varies as well.

Military academies may or may not grant university degrees. In the US, graduates have a major field of study, earning a Bachelor's degree in that subject just as at other universities. However, in British academies, the graduate does not achieve a university degree, since the whole of the one-year course (undertaken mainly but not exclusively by university graduates) is dedicated to military training.

There are two types of military academies: national (government-run) and state/private-run.

  • Graduates from national academies are typically commissioned as officers in the country's military. The new officers usually have an obligation to serve for a certain number of years. In some countries (e.g. Britain) all military officers train at the appropriate academy, whereas in others (e.g. the United States) only a percentage do and the service academies are seen as institutions which supply service-specific officers within the forces (about 15 percent of US military officers).
  • State or private-run academy graduates have no requirement to join the military after graduation, although some schools have a high rate of graduate military service. Today, most of these schools have ventured away from their military roots and now enroll both military and civilian students. The only exception in the United States is the Virginia Military Institute which remains all-military.

List of military academies by countries[]

Albania[]

Angola[]

Argentina[]

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner addresses the 2010 graduating class of Argentina's National Military College.

Argentine Army:

  • Colegio Militar de la Nación (National Military College), in El Palomar, Buenos Aires (northwestern outskirts of Buenos Aires)

Argentine Navy:

  • Escuela Naval Militar (), in (in Ensenada, near La Plata)

Argentine Air Force:

  • Escuela de Aviación Militar (), in the city of Córdoba

Armenia[]

Australia[]

The Australian Defence Force Academy is a tri-service military college established in 1986.

Austria[]

  • Theresian Military Academy

Azerbaijan[]

Bangladesh[]

Colours Contingent of the Bangladesh Military Academy, a training institute for officers of the Bangladesh Army

Cadet colleges in Bangladesh[]

Belarus[]

Belgium[]

  • Royal Military Academy (Belgium)

Bolivia[]

  • (Colegio Militar del Ejército de Bolivia)[9]
  • Bolivian Air Force Academy

Brazil[]

Basic Education[]

(offers an education with military values for civilians students of primary and secondary school)

Colégio Militar do Rio de Janeiro

Brazilian Army:

Preparatory Schools[]

(prepares students for admission to one of the official training academies)

Academia Militar das Agulhas Negras

Brazilian Army:[11]

Brazil's Navy:[12]

Brazilian Air Force:[13]

Sailor and Marine Soldier Training[]

Escola de Aprendizes-Marinheiros de Santa Catarina

Brazil's Navy:

Sergeants Training[]

Escola de Especialistas da Aeronáutica

Brazilian Army:

Brazil's Navy:

  • Centro de Instrução Almirante Alexandrino (CIAA) (Admiral Alexandrino Instruction Center)
  • Centro de Instrução Almirante Sylvio de Camargo (CIASC) (Admiral Sylvio de Camargo Instruction Center)

Brazilian Air Force:

Officers Training[]

Escola Naval

Brazilian Army:

Brazil's navy:

Brazilian Air Force:

Bulgaria[]

  • Vasil Levski National Military University founded in 1878 as a military school in Plovdiv
    • Air Force Faculty in Dolna Mitropoliya
    • in Shumen
    • in Veliko Tarnovo
  • Nikola Vaptsarov Naval Academy in Varna and founded in 1881 as Naval Machinery School in Rousse
  • Rakovski Defence and Staff College in Sofia, founded with an Act of the 15th National Assembly of March 1, 1912, in Sofia

Canada[]

Royal Military College of Canada band piper and bugler. Established in 1876, the College is Canada's only post-secondary military college with degree-granting powers.

Two post-secondary military academies are operated under the Canadian Military Colleges system, the Royal Military College of Canada (RMCC) in Kingston, Ontario; and the Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean (CMR) in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. RMCC was established in 1876, while CMR was established in 1954.[14] The two institutions provided military education to officer cadets of all three elements in the Canadian Forces; the navy, army and air force; with RMC granted the authority to confer academic degrees in arts, science and engineering by the 1960s.[15] From 1940 to 1995, the Department of National Defence operated a third military college in Victoria, British Columbia, known as Royal Roads Military College.[14]

Graduates of the Colleges are widely acknowledged to have had a disproportionate impact in the Canadian services and society, thanks to the solid foundations provided by their military education.[16] Military discipline and training, as well as a focus on physical fitness and fluency in both of Canada's two official languages, English and French, provided cadets with ample challenges and a very fulfilling experience.[17] In 1995 the Department of National Defence was forced to close RRMC and CMR due to budget considerations, but RMCC continues to operate.[18] RRMC reopened as a civilian university in the fall of 1995, and is maintained by the Government of British Columbia. In 2007, the Department of National Defence reopened CMR as a military academy that offers equivalent schooling as CEGEP, a level of post-secondary education in Quebec's education system.

In addition to Canadian Military Colleges, the Canadian Armed Forces also operate a number of training centres and schools, including the Canadian Forces College, and the Canadian Forces Language School. The components of the Canadian Armed Forces also maintain training centres and schools. The Canadian Army Doctrine and Training Centre (CADTC) is a formation in the Army that delivers combat, and doctrinal training. The CADTC includes several training establishments, such as the Canadian Manoeuvre Training Centre, Combat Training Centre, Command and Staff College, and the Peace Support Training Centre. The 2 Canadian Air Division is the formation responsible for training in the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), and includes establishments like the Royal Canadian Air Force Academy, 2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School, and 3 Canadian Forces Flying Training School. The RCAF also maintains the Canadian Forces School of Survival and Aeromedical Training.

In addition to publicly operated institutions, Canada is also home to one private military boarding school, Robert Land Academy, in West Lincoln, Ontario. Founded in 1978, it is an all-boys' institute that is fully accredited by Ontario's Ministry of Education. The school offers elementary and secondary levels of education, providing schooling for students from Grade 6 to Grade 12.

China, People's Republic of[]

Main gate of the PLA National Defence University, a national university administered by the People's Liberation Army.

Colombia[]

The Honour Guard of José María Córdova Military School. Cadets undergo undergraduate studies at the institution.

National Army of Colombia:

Colombian Air Force:

Colombian Naval Infantry and Colombian Navy:

  • , in Cartagena de Indias.

National Police of Colombia:

  • General Santander National Police Academy, in Bogotá.

Czech Republic[]

  • Univerzita Obrany (University of Defence)
  • Military academy and training command

Denmark[]

Established in 1701, the Royal Danish Naval Academy is the oldest-still-existing officers' academy in the world.

Egypt[]

El Salvador[]

Estonia[]

The Baltic Defence College is a multinational military college established by the three Baltic states.
  • Estonian Military Academy
  • Baltic Defence College, both in Tartu

Finland[]

The Raakunamäki Military Academy in Lappeenranta, Finland
  • Finnish National Defence University (Maanpuolustuskorkeakoulu), on Santahamina island, Helsinki

France[]

Students of Prytanée National Militaire having lunch, 1900. The institution is one of several military preparatory schools in France.

High schools[]

Officer academies[]

Cadets of École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr during the 2008 Bastille Day military parade. The military college was established in 1802 by Napoleon.
  • École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr (ESM, literally the "Special Military School of St Cyr") is the French Military Academy. It is often referred to as "Saint-Cyr". Founded by Napoleon in 1802, and initially in Fontainebleau, it was moved first to Saint-Cyr-l'École in 1808, and then to Coëtquidan (Brittany) in 1945.
  • École militaire interarmes (EMIA)
  • (ECA), founded in 2013
  • École de l'air: the French Air Force Academy
  • École Navale: the French Naval Academy
  • École des officiers de la gendarmerie nationale (EOGN): gendarmerie commissioned officers academy
  • École Polytechnique (X): a French engineering grande école of military status. Though all of its French engineering students are enlisted and trained as officers, 5% of its graduates remain in the military after graduation.[19]
  • ENSTA Bretagne: a French engineering grande école of military status. Only 1/4 of its students are actual officers-in-training.
  • École de Santé des Armées: medical school of French army
  • : trains military engineers of the Armed Forces, opened 2013 (also one of the newest)

Postgraduate academies[]

  • École d'état-major (Staff school): first step of higher military studies, for officer of OF-2 rank.
  • École de Guerre (War School): second step of higher military studies, mainly for ranks OF-2 and OF-3 who want to continue the command track (e.g. to command battalion or regiment).
  • Collège d'enseignement supérieur de l'armée de terre (Army Higher Education College): second step of military education, but for officers whishing to achieve a high-level specialization.
    • Cours supérieur d'état-major (Advanced Staff Course)
    • Enseignement militaire supérieur scientifique et technique (Higher Technical and Scientific Education).
  • Centre des hautes études militaire (Center for Advanced Military Studies): final step of military education, for very few selected OF-5. Its students also attend the civilian institut des hautes études de défense nationale.

Georgia[]

  • National Defense Academy
  • Cadet Bachelor School
  • Junior Officer Basic School
  • Aviation Air Defense Officer Basic School
  • Medical Officer School
  • Captain Career School
  • Command and General Staff School
  • School of Advance Defense Studies
  • Language Training School

[20]

Germany[]

The main complex of the Naval Academy Mürwik of the German Navy
Library of Bundeswehr University Munich, which provides post-secondary education to military personnel and civilians

Germany has a unique system for civil and military education. The only true military academy is the Führungsakademie der Bundeswehr where mainly future staff officers and general staff officers are further trained.

The standard education in military leadership is the task of the Offizierschulen (officers' schools) run by the three branches. The contents differ from branch to branch. According to the doctrine "leading by task", in the army all prospective platoon leaders are trained down to the level of a commander of a mixed combat battalion. There they also have to pass an officer exam to become commissioned later on.

Moreover, there exist so called Waffenschulen (school of weapons) like infantry school or artillery school. There the officers learn to deal with the typical tasks of their respective corps.

A specialty of the German concept of officer formation is the academic education. Germany runs two Universities of the German Federal Armed Forces where almost every future officer has to pass non-military studies and achieve a bachelor's or master's degree. During their studies (after at least three years of service) the candidates become commissioned Leutnant (second lieutenant).

The three officer's schools are:

Academic and staff education:

Greece[]

A sloop of the Hellenic Naval Academy sails past with a crew of naval cadet officers. The Academy is supervised by the Hellenic Navy.

The Hellenic Armed Forces have military academies supervised by each branch of the Armed Forces individually:

  • The Hellenic Army supervises:
  • The Hellenic Air Force supervises:
    • The Icarus Air Force Academy, in Tatoi (Athens).
  • The Hellenic Navy supervises:
    • The Hellenic Naval Cadets Academy, in Piraeus.

Hungary[]

  • National University of Public Service (Successor of Royal Hungarian Ludovica Military Academy, which founded in 1808)
    • Faculty of Military Sciences and Officer Training

India[]

Robin K. Dhowan, Chief of Naval Staff for India, reviews cadets during a passing out parade of the Indian Military Academy. The institution is a training academy of the Indian Army.

Military Schools 1. 5 Rashtriya Military Schools across India in the Belgaum Military School, Bangalore Military School, Chail Military School, Dholpur Military School and Ajmer Military School[21]

  • Classes 6 to 12, run by the Integrated Headquarters of Ministry Of Defence (Army) of the Indian government
  • Educational institute to train for defence services, no combat training

Indonesia[]

Cadets of the Indonesian Military Academy in parade uniform during the Indonesian independence day ceremony. The institution is the military academy of the Indonesian Army.
Cadets of the Indonesian Air Force Academy in formation before parading for the Air force anniversary ceremony. The Academy is operated by the Indonesian Air Force.

The Indonesian Military Academy[22] was founded in Yogyakarta, October 13, 1945, by the order of General Staff Chief of Indonesia Army Lieutenant General Urip Sumohardjo as the Militaire Academie (MA) Yogyakarta.

Currently, the Tentara Nasional Indonesia or the TNI (Indonesian National Armed Forces), under the supervision of the Commanding General of the (a two or three-star officer in billet) in the HQ of the Indonesian National Armed Forces, has divided the academies into the three respective services:

  • Indonesian Military Academy (Akademi Militer; Akmil), in Magelang, Central Java, is under the supervision of the Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Army, operated since 1946.
  • Indonesian Naval Academy (Akademi Angkatan Laut; AAL), in Surabaya, East Java, is under the supervision of the . The Indonesian Naval Academy also educates and forms officers to serve in the Indonesian Marine Corps. In existence since 1951.
  • Indonesian Air Force Academy (Akademi Angkatan Udara; AAU), in Yogyakarta, is under the supervision of the . The academy has three majorings which are: electronics, engineering, and administration. Following graduation, students who are selected as Pilot and Navigator conduct further training in the Pilot and Navigator Flight School prior bearing the Pilot/Navigator designation. Active since 1945, but also inherits the traditions of former Dutch military aviation schools.

Each service academy is headed by a two-star general who serves as superintendent, and his/her deputy is a one-star officer. All the students (cadets/midshipman) are recruited from senior high school graduates from all over Indonesia. Shortly after graduation, they are commissioned as Letnan Dua (Second Lieutenant/Ensign)) in their respective service branches and get the Diploma IV (Associate degree, 4th Grade) comparable to civil academies or universities. The length term is now 4 years and is divided into five grades of cadets' ranks, starting from the lowest:

  • Prajurit Taruna/Kadet/Karbol (Cadet Private), 1st year (4 months)
  • Kopral Taruna/Kadet/Karbol (Cadet Corporal), 1st year (8 months)
  • Sersan Taruna/Kadet/Karbol (Cadet Sergeant), 2nd year
  • Sersan Mayor Dua Taruna/Kadet/Karbol (Cadet Second Sergeant Major), 3rd year
  • Sersan Mayor Satu Taruna/Kadet/Karbol (Cadet First Sergeant Major), 4th year

Taruna refers to cadets in the Military Academy, Kadet refers to cadets in the Naval Academy, and Karbol refers to cadets in the Air Force Academy.

Until 1999, before the Indonesian National Police officially separated from the armed forces, the Indonesian Police Academy ("AKPOL") also stood under the National Armed Forces Academy but now has separated from the Military and is under the auspices of the President of Indonesia controlled by the National Police Headquarters (Mabes Polri), where in the other hand the Armed Forces (Army, Naval, and Air Force) Academies of Indonesia is under the auspices of the Ministry of Defense controlled by the Armed Forces General Headquarters (Mabes TNI). Presently, the Police Academy is in Semarang (Central Java), and is supervised under the supervision of the Chief of Indonesian National Police (Kapolri).

All three academies and the Police Academy have a joint 4th class cadet training program since 2008, after completing it the cadets go to their respective academies to continue with the three remaining years of study before commissioning.

Iran[]

Iran has five main military universities:

  • Imam Ali Officers' University (Persian: دانشگاه افسری امام علی; acronym:[23] دا اف, DĀʿAF), formerly known as Officers' School (Persian: دانشکده افسری) is the military academy of Ground Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran Army, in Tehran, Iran.
  • Shahid Sattari Aeronautical University (Persian: دانشگاه علوم و فنون هوایی شهید ستاری) is the military academy of Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force, in Tehran, Iran.
  • Imam Khomeini Naval University of Noshahr (Persian: دانشگاه علوم و فنون دریایی امام خمینی) is the military academy of Islamic Republic of Iran Navy, in Noshahr, Mazandaran, Iran.
  • Khatam al-Anbia Air Defense Academy (Persian: دانشگاه پدافند هوایی خاتم‌الانبیاء آجا) is the military academy of Islamic Republic of Iran Air Defense Force, in Tehran, Iran.
  • Imam Hossein University (Persian: دانشگاه امام حسین‎; acronym: IHU) is the military academy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, in Tehran, Iran.

Ireland, Republic of[]

Italy[]

A cadet of Italy's Nunziatella military academy in 1787, the year the academy was established

High school level institutions (only for classical and scientific liceum, starting from grade 10):

  • Scuola Militare Nunziatella, founded during the Bourbon Period in 1787, in Italian Army, Naples
  • Scuola Militare Teulié, founded during the Napoleonic period in 1802, Italian Army, Milan
  • , Italian Navy, Venice
  • , Italian Air Force, Florence

2009–2010 school year was the first school year with girls attending.

Non Commissioned Officer (NCO) schools:

  • Army: Scuola sottufficiali dell'Esercito Italiano, Viterbo
  • Air Force: Scuola sottufficiali della Marina Militare, Taranto and Law Maddalena
  • Navy: Scuola marescialli dell'Aeronautica Militare, Viterbo
  • Carabinieri: Scuola marescialli e brigadieri dei carabinieri, Firenze
  • Guardia di Finanza: Scuola ispettori e sovrintendenti della Guardia di Finanza, L'Aquila

University level institutions:

Japan[]

  • National Defense Academy of Japan (university level)
  • National Defense Medical College (university level medical school)
  • Japan Coast Guard Academy (university level)
  • Officer Candidate Training Schools (for each of Ground, Maritime and Air Self-defense forces)

Kazakhstan[]

Cadets of the Military Institute of the Kazakh Ground Forces march in the 2015 Moscow Victory Day Parade.

Korea, North[]

Korea, South[]

Cadets of the Korean Military Academy during a visit to United Nations Command

The three main military academies:

  • Korea Military Academy (Army)
  • Korea Naval Academy
  • Korea Air Force Academy

Other military academies:

  • Korea Army Academy at Yeongcheon, formerly Korea Third Military Academy
  • Armed Forces Nursing Academy

Kyrgyzstan[]

  • Military Institute of the Armed Forces of the Kyrgyz Republic
  • Center for Advanced Training of Officers

Malaysia[]

Cadets of National Defence University of Malaysia on an exercise. The institution is a post-secondary school operated by the Malaysian Armed Forces.

Secondary level institutions:

  • Royal Military College (Malaysia) (Maktab Tentera Diraja)

University level:

  • National Defence University of Malaysia[24] (University Pertahanan Nasional Malaysia) (foundation, bachelor's degree, master's degree, PhD and specialist courses)
  • Armed Forces Defence College[25] (Maktab Pertahanan Angkatan Tentera)

Specialist training and staff institutions:

  • Officers Cadet School in Port Dickson (OCS)
  • Malaysian Armed Forces Staff College[26] (Maktab Turus Angkatan Tentera)
  • Armed Forces Health Training Institute[27] (Institut Latihan Kesihatan Angkatan Tentera)
  • Malaysian Peacekeeping Training Centre[28] (Pusat Latihan Pengaman Malaysia)

Reserve Officer Training Units (Malay: Pasukan Latihan Pegawai Simpanan or PALAPES) or ROTU exists only in public universities in Malaysia. This is a tertiary institution based officer commissioning program to equip students as officer cadets with military knowledge and understanding for service as Commissioned Officers in the reserve components of the various branches of the Malaysian Armed Forces.

Mexico[]

A cadet of Mexico's Heroic Military Academy with a golden eagle, the institution's mascot

Moldova[]

Mongolia[]

Myanmar[]

Namibia[]

Netherlands[]

Cadets in a classroom of the Netherlands' Royal Naval Institute. The academy is a part of Nederlandse Defensie Academie.
  • Koninklijke Militaire Academie
  • Royal Naval College (Netherlands)

New Zealand[]

Tier One – initial officer training

  • New Zealand Commissioning Course, Waiouru (NZ Army)
  • Initial Officer Training, Woodbourne (RNZAF)
  • Officer Training School, Devonport Naval Base

Tier Two – junior officer education

  • NZDF Junior Staff Course, New Zealand Defence College

Tier Three – senior officer education

  • NZDF Staff Course, New Zealand Defence College

Nigeria[]

Cadets in a lab of Nigeria's Air Force Military School, a boys-only military high school

High school training[]

  • Nigerian Military School, ZariaNigerian Army military school for boys
  • Air Force Military School, Jos, Nigeria, in JosNigerian Air Force military school for boys
  • , , Akwa Ibom StateNigerian Navy military School for boys

Undergraduate officer training[]

  • Nigerian Defence Academy, KadunaNigerian Armed Forces university school

Postgraduate officer training[]

  • Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Jaji, at Jaji, Kaduna – joint Nigerian Armed Forces higher studies institute for both indigenous and international students
  • , Lagos – school for training middle career Nigerian Army officers on military logistics
  • National Defence College, Abuja – school for training senior officers of the Nigerian Armed Forces and also some members of the civil service

Norway[]

Buildings of the Norwegian Naval Academy, an undergraduate institution intended to instruct officers of the Royal Norwegian Navy

Undergraduate officer training[]

  • Norwegian Military Academy, Linderud/Oslo (Norwegian Army)
  • Norwegian Naval Academy, Laksevåg/Bergen (Royal Norwegian Navy)
  • Norwegian Air Force Academy, Trondheim (Royal Norwegian Air Force)

Postgraduate training[]

  • , Oslo (joint)
  • , Oslo (civil service/very senior officers)

Pakistan[]

A passing out parade at Pakistan Military Academy
  • Pakistan Military Academy, Kakul
  • Pakistan Air Force Academy, Risalpur
  • Pakistan Naval Academy, Karachi
  • Command and Staff College, Quetta
  • National Defence University, Islamabad
  • Pakistan Navy War College, Lahore
  • PAF Air War College, Karachi
  • Army Burn Hall College, for boys, Abbottabad
  • Army Public College of Management Sciences (public sector)
  • Military College Jhelum, Jhelum District
  • Military College Murree, Rawalpindi District
  • Military College Sui, Dera Bugti District
  • PAF College Sargodha
  • Cadet College Razmak, Razmak North Waziristan Agency
  • Cadet College Kohat
  • Cadet College Wana
  • Cadet College Mastung
  • Cadet College Petaro, Pakistan Navy
  • Garrison Cadet College Kohat
  • Cadet College Skardu

Paraguay[]

Peru[]

Undergraduate officer training

  • Chorrillos Military School (Peruvian Army)
  • Peruvian Naval School (Peruvian Navy)
  • (Peruvian Air Force)
  • (National Police of Peru)

Philippines[]

Graduating cadets of Philippine Military Academy at a homecoming
The National Defense College of the Philippines is a graduate-level military college established in 1963.

The Philippines patterned all its service academies after the United States Military Academy (West Point) and the United States Merchant Marine Academy (King's Point).

These higher education institutions are operated by the Philippine Government and grant different baccalaureate degrees.

  • Philippine Military Academy (Akademiyang Militar ng Pilipinas), City of Baguio – It is the primary training school of the Armed Forces of the Philippines for would be regular commissioned officers of the Philippine Army, Philippine Navy, Philippine Marine Corps and the Philippine Air Force. It is under the control of the Department of National Defense. Its former name was the Philippine Constabulary Academy. During the American colonial rule era, U.S. Army Cavalry Officers established the school for the professionalization of the enlisted personnel of the defunct Philippine Constabulary. It was renamed the Philippine Military Academy before the 1930s. In 1992, PMA stopped providing graduates to the Philippine Constabulary after the passage of Republic Act 6975 which resulted in the merger of the Philippine Constabulary and the Integrated National Police. The merged institutions was named the Philippine National Police. Beginning in 1993, PMA became a co-educational school.
  • Philippine Merchant Marine Academy, Zambales – It is a school for students who shall serve in different private shipping companies, foreign or local. Its graduates may serve in the Philippine Coast Guard and the Philippine Navy as an ensign after graduation depending upon their choice. All PMMA graduates are also automatically appointed by the president of the Philippines as ensigns (2nd lieutenants) in the Philippine Navy Reserve. This is the oldest of the Philippine service academies having been established in 1820 during the long period of Spanish colonial rule in the country, and was first situated in Manila for many years.

Aside from the PMA and the PMMA, all three branches of the AFP have their own Officer Candidate Course Programs for both men and women, patterned after their US counterparts.

The nation's higher military colleges are:

  • Armed Forces of the Philippines Command and General Staff College, Quezon City – educates officers of the AFP not exceeding the ranks of Colonel or Navy Captain
  • National Defense College of the Philippines, Quezon City – is a school for senior AFP officers for military/naval planning and to ready them in holding the ranks of Brigadier General/Commodore. Notable civilians may enroll and be given the honorary rank of Lieutenant Colonel/Commander in the AFP Reserve upon graduation.

Poland[]

Cadets of the Polish Naval Academy aboard the ORP Iskra, 1937

Portugal[]

Students of Colégio Militar on parade. The school is one of two pre-university institutions in Portugal.

Pre-university level institution[]

Undergraduate officer training[]

The Bemposta Palace of the Portuguese Military Academy, an undergraduate-level institution
  • Academia Militar, Lisbon and Amadora – Portuguese Army and Republican National Guard university school
  • Escola Naval, Almada – Portuguese Navy university school
  • Academia da Força Aérea, Sintra – Portuguese Air Force university school

Postgraduate and staff training[]

  • Instituto de Estudos Superiores Militares, Lisbon – joint command and staff college

Romania[]

Russia[]

See also: Cadet Corps (Russia), Military academies in Russia

First stage of training[]

  • The Cadet Corps is an admissions-based military middle school for young boys that was founded in the Russian Empire in 1732, soon becoming widespread throughout the country.
  • Omsk Cadet Corps
  • Karelia Cadet Corps
  • Krasnoyarsk Cadet Corps
  • Magnitogorsk Cadet Corps
  • Georgy Zhukov Moscow Cadet Corps
  • Moscow Cossacks Cadet Corps
  • Moscow Cadet Corps of Military Music
  • Moscow Cadet Corps of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia
  • Moscow Diplomatic Cadet Corps
  • Moscow Cadet Corps "Heroes of the Battle of Stalingrad"
  • St.Petersburg Space Forces Cadet Corps
  • St.Petersburg Strategic Rocket Forces Cadet Corps
  • St.Petersburg Artillery Cadet Corps
  • The 1st St. Petersburg Border guard Cadet Corps of the FSB
  • Tambov Cadet Corps
  • Toliatti Cadet Corps
  • Ufa Cadet Corps
  • The Sea Cadet Corps
  • Kronstadt S.C.C.
  • Moscow Representative Sea Cadet Corps of the Navigation and Mathematics School
  • Moscow Sea Cadet Corps Heroes of Sevastopol

Secondary education[]

A cadet of Moscow Suvorov Military School, the first of several Suvorov Military Schools established throughout Russia
  • Suvorov Military Schools are a type of boarding school in modern Russia for boys aged 14–18. Education in such these schools focuses on military related subjects.
  • Irkutsk S.M.S.
  • Kazan S.M.S.
  • Moscow S.M.S.
  • Moscow Military Music College
  • North Caucasus S.M.S.
  • Orenburg S.M.S.
  • Perm S.M.S.
  • St. Petersburg Space Forces S.M.S.
  • Tula S.M.S. (reopening 2016 after 56 years of closure)
  • Tver S.M.S.
  • Ulyanovsk S.M.S.
  • Ussuriysk S.M.S.
  • Yekaterinburg S.M.S.
  • St. Petersburg N.N.S.
  • Murmansk N.N.S.
  • Kaliningrad N.N.S
  • Sevastopol N.N.S.
  • Vladivostok N.N.S.

Post-secondary education[]

The Engineers Castle of Russia's Military Engineering-Technical University, with a monument to Peter the Great in the foreground
Established in 1832, the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia is a post-graduate military academy.
  • Combined Arms Academy of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
  • Gagarin Air Force Academy (now the Gagarin-Zhukovsky Combined Air Force Academy)
  • Military Engineering-Technical University
  • Saint Petersburg Mining Institute
  • Alexander Popov Naval Radio-electronic Academy
  • Military Materiel Security Academy
  • Pacific Naval Institute
  • Moscow Peter the Great Strategic Rocket Forces Academy
  • Moscow Higher Military Command School
  • Baltic Naval Institute
  • Sevastopol Black Sea Higher Naval Institute
  • Military University of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation
  • Far Eastern Higher Combined Arms Command School
  • Budyonny Military Academy of the Signal Corps
  • Yekaterinburg Force Command School of Artillery
  • Air General Staff Center of Missile and Air Defense Excellence
  • Khabarovsk Military Commanders Training Academy
  • Civil Defense Academy of the Ministry of Emergency Situations
  • Sergey Kirov Military Communications Academy
  • S.M. Kirov Military Medical Academy
  • St. Petersburg Military College of Physical Fitness and Sports
  • Marshal Aleksander Vasilevsky Military Academy of the Armed Forces Air Defense Branch
  • Moscow Border Guards Superior College
  • Military University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs

Staff college[]

  • General staff Academy
  • N. G. Kuznetsov Naval Academy

Serbia[]

Cadets fencing at the Serbian Military Academy
  • Military Academy Belgrade
  • Military Medical Academy (Serbia)

Singapore[]

Somalia[]

  • Camp TURKSOM trains both officers and NCOs, offers a two-year course for officers and a one-year course for NCOs.

South Africa[]

  • South African Military Academy provides officers in the SANDF with an opportunity to earn a 3yr BMil degree.

Spain[]

Sri Lanka[]

University[]

  • General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University, Colombo

Officer training[]

Staff training[]

  • Defence Services Command and Staff College

Sweden[]

Undergraduate officer training[]

Karlberg Palace, home of Sweden's Military Academy Karlberg. Established in 1792, it is the oldest military academy in the world to remain in its original location.
  • Military Academy Karlberg, officers
  • , specialist officers (NCO) and reserve officers

Postgraduate training[]

  • Swedish Defence University

Taiwan (Republic of China)[]

  • R.O.C. Military Academy
  • R.O.C. Naval Academy
  • R.O.C. Air Force Academy
  • R.O.C. Air Force Institute of Technology
  • Army Academy R.O.C.
  • National Defense University
    • War College
    • Army Command and Staff College
    • Naval Command and Staff College
    • Air Force Command and Staff College
    • Institute of Technology
    • Management College
    • Political Warfare College
  • National Defense Medical Center
  • Chung-cheng Armed Forces Preparatory School

Tanzania[]

Thailand[]

  • Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School (secondary level)
  • Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy (university level)
  • Phramongkutklao College of Medicine (medicine, university level)
  • Royal Thai Navy Academy (university level)
  • Royal Thai Air Force Academy (university level)
Medicine, University level
  • Phramongkutklao College of Medicine

Turkey[]

Cadets of the Turkish Military Academy at 2016 Sandhurst Competition at West Point

Turkmenistan[]

Uganda[]

Uganda maintains the followings military training institutions, as of December 2010:[29]

Ukraine[]

A number of universities have specialized military institutes, such as the Faculty of Military Legal Studies at Kharkiv's National Yaroslav Mudryi Law Academy of Ukraine; however, the primary Ukrainian military academies are the following:[39]

  • Hetman Petro Sahaydachnyi Military Academy, Lviv[40]
  • Admiral Pavel Nakhimov Naval Academy, Odessa
  • Ivan Kozhedub Air Force University, Kharkiv

Staff colleges[]

  • National Defence University of Ukraine "Ivan Chernyakhovsky", Kyiv[41]

United Kingdom[]

Pre-University level institution[]

A parade at Welbeck Defence Sixth Form College, one of two pre-university level institutions in the country
  • Welbeck Defence Sixth Form College – Sixth form college for 16- to 18-year-olds providing A-Level education in preparation for entry into the British Armed Forces or Ministry of Defence Civil Service as Technical Officers, following undergraduate education sponsored under the Defence Technical Undergraduate Scheme (DTUS). The college is due to close in 2021 after an announcement was made in the House of Commons on March 11, 2019.[42]
  • Duke of York's Royal Military School – Military based secondary school in Dover, Kent; students are influenced to join the forces after education, but have no commitment to do so.

There are also numerous Cadet forces that operate for all branches of the armed forces for children aged 10–20. These are not designed to recruit people into the armed forces but rather are simply Ministry of Defence sponsored youth organisations.

Undergraduate service[]

Although an undergraduate degree is not a prerequisite for Officer training, the majority of potential Officers will have attended University before joining the Armed Forces. At some universities there may be the option for people to join either a University Royal Naval Unit, a University Officer Training Corps (UOTC) or a University Air Squadron, which are designed to introduce students to life in the Forces and show them the careers that are available. People sponsored under the Defence Technical Undergraduate Scheme will join one of the four Support Units attached to universities participating in DTUS. There is a requirement for bursars of DTUS to join the military for three years after completion of their degree, there no requirement for students of any other organisation to join the military after they finish their degree programs; and the great majority have no further contact with the armed forces. Although service with these organisations may give some initial benefit to cadets attending the military colleges/academies, the next stage of the officer training programs assumes no prior military experience/knowledge, and those that did not partake in military activities at university are not disadvantaged.

Officer training[]

The Passing Out Parade at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, one of four military academies in the United Kingdom.

There are now four military academies in the United Kingdom. Although the curriculum at each varies due to the differing nature of the service a man or woman is joining, it is a combination of military and academic study that is designed to turn young civilians into comprehensively trained military officers.

  • Britannia Royal Naval College, HMS Dartmouth
  • Commando Training Centre Royal Marines
  • Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
  • Royal Air Force College Cranwell

Officer Training for the Reserve Forces (e.g. Army Reserve, Royal Naval Reserve, RAF Reserves and Royal Marines Reserves) also takes place at the relevant military academies, but under a different curriculum and the courses tend to be concentrated into a much shorter period – a significant amount of the study will be undertaken at the cadet's reserve unit.

Postgraduate and staff training[]

  • Defence Academy of the United Kingdom
  • Royal College of Defence Studies (mainly for officers of Colonel/Brigadier or equivalent rank selected as future senior leaders; highly selective)
  • Joint Services Command and Staff College (courses for officers from Major to Brigadier or equivalent rank)
  • Defence College of Management and Technology
  • Armed Forces Chaplaincy Centre
  • Advanced Research and Assessment Group
  • Conflict Studies Research Centre
The first RAF staff College course at Andover, 1922. The staff college operated from 1922 to 1970.

United States[]

President Donald Trump poses for a photo with some graduates following the 2019 U.S. Air Force Academy graduation ceremony.

Introduction[]

In the United States, the term "military academy" does not necessarily mean a government-owned institution run by the armed forces to train its own officers. It may also mean a middle school, high school, or college, whether public or private, which instructs its students in military-style education, discipline and tradition. Students at such civilian institutions can earn a commission in the U.S. military through the successful completion of a Reserve Officer Training Corps program along with their college or university's academic coursework.

  • The term military school primarily refers to pre-collegiate secondary-school-level military institutions, which were more common before the 1970s and 1980s.
  • The term military academy commonly refers to a pre-collegiate, collegiate, and post-collegiate institution, especially the U.S. military-run academies.
  • The term US military staff colleges refers to separate graduate schools catering to officers on active duty .

Most state-level military academies maintain both a civilian student body and a traditional corps of cadets. The only exception is the Virginia Military Institute, which remains all-military.[43]

Federal service academies[]

Cadets of the United States Military Academy (USMA) navigate the horizontal ladder and vertical rope obstacle of the Indoor Obstacle Course Test. USMA is one of five federal service academies.

The colleges operated by the U.S. Federal Government, referred to as federal service academies, are:

  • United States Military Academy, West Point, New York
  • United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland
  • United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colorado
  • United States Coast Guard Academy, New London, Connecticut
  • United States Merchant Marine Academy, Kings Point, New York

Post-graduate school[]

  • Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland

Senior and junior military colleges[]

Although Texas A&M University has transformed into a state university, it still maintains a corps of cadets along with a civilian student body.
Cadets of Marion Military Institute after the Alumni Weekend parade. The Institute is one of four junior military colleges in the United States.

There is one all-military state-sponsored military academy:

  • The Virginia Military Institute (VMI), Lexington, Virginia

In addition, these five institutions that were military colleges at the time of their founding now maintain both a corps of cadets and a civilian student body. Many of these institutions also offer on-line degree programs:

  • University of North Georgia, Dahlonega, Georgia — Formed by a 2013 merger with Gainesville State College, its main predecessor institution, last known as North Georgia College & State University, was chartered as a military college. However, when NGCSU was founded in 1873 as North Georgia Agricultural College, it had both a corps and a civilian student body, and was also the state's first coeducational college.
  • Norwich University Corps of Cadets. Norwich University, Northfield, Vermont is a private university in Northfield, Vermont. It is the oldest private military college in the United States. The university was founded in 1819 at Norwich, Vermont, as the American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy. It is the oldest of six senior military colleges, and is recognized by the United States Department of Defense as the "Birthplace of ROTC"
  • Texas A&M Corps of Cadets, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
  • The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina
  • Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia

Along with VMI, these institutions are known as the senior military colleges of the US.

Today four institutions are considered military junior colleges (MJC). These four military schools participate in the Army's two-year Early Commissioning Program, an Army ROTC program where qualified students can earn a commission as a Second Lieutenant after only two years of college. The four military Junior colleges are as follows:

  • Georgia Military College, Milledgeville, Georgia
  • Marion Military Institute, Marion, Alabama
  • New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, New Mexico
  • Valley Forge Military Academy and College, Wayne, Pennsylvania

Merchant Marine Academies that have military academy-style operations[]

Cadets of the Great Lakes Maritime Academy learning how to row a boat. The institution is one of six military-styled maritime academies in the United States.

There are six state-operated Merchant Marine academies:

These merchant marine academies operate on a military college system. Part of the training that the cadets receive is naval and military in nature. Cadets may apply for Naval Reserve commissions upon obtaining their Merchant Marine Officer's licenses. Most if not all also offer some form of military commissioning program into the active duty US Navy, US Marine Corps, or US Coast Guard.

Staff colleges[]

The United States staff colleges, mandated to serve the needs of officers for post-graduate studies and other such graduate institutions as mandated by the Department of Defense are:

United States Air Force Air University attached staff colleges[]
  • The Air University in Maxwell AFB, Alabama, includes:
    • Squadron Officer College and Squadron Officer School
    • Air Command and Staff College
    • Air War College
Staff colleges of the United States Army[]
A classroom at the School of Advanced Military Studies, one of four staff colleges of the United States Army
  • United States Army Command and General Staff College
  • United States Army School of Advanced Military Studies
  • United States Army War College
Staff colleges of the United States Navy and the United States Marine Corps[]
  • Naval War College
  • Naval Postgraduate School
  • Marine Corps University
Joint Service staff colleges[]
The National War College, a school of the National Defense University, is a multi-service staff college in the United States.
  • National Defense University in Washington, D.C., includes:
    • Joint Forces Staff College (Norfolk, Virginia)
    • National War College
    • Dwight D. Eisenhower School for National Security and Resource Strategy
  • Defense Acquisition University

Other post-graduate colleges operated by the DoD[]

Uzbekistan[]

The Tashkent Higher Tank Command School during the soviet period

Vietnam[]

Zimbabwe[]

  • Zimbabwe National Defence University

See also[]

Further reading[]

  • Cadet, Linton Hall, Linton Hall Military School Memories: One cadet's memoir, Scrounge Press, 2014. ISBN 9781495931963 Memoir of cadet who attended a military school for boys ages 6 to 16.

External links[]

References[]

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  2. ^ "Royal Danish Naval Academy". Royal Danish Defence College (in Danish). Retrieved January 7, 2016.
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  5. ^ Major-General John Gaspard Le Marchant (1766–1812) Archived March 23, 2012(Date mismatch), at the Wayback Machine Defence Academy
  6. ^ Linton Hall Cadet, Linton Hall Military School Memories: One cadet's memoir, Arlington, Virginia.: Scrounge Press, 2014 ISBN 978-1-4959-3196-3 describes a military school for boys ages 6–16.
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  15. ^ 4237 Dr. Adrian Preston & Peter Dennis (Edited) "Swords and Covenants" Rowman And Littlefield, London. Croom Helm. 1976.
  16. ^ H16511 Dr. Richard Preston "R.M.C. and Kingston: The effect of imperial and military influences on a Canadian community" 1968
  17. ^ H1877 R. Guy C. Smith (editor) "As You Were! Ex-Cadets Remember". In 2 Volumes. Volume I: 1876–1918. Volume II: 1919–1984. Royal Military College. [Kingston]. The R.M.C. Club of Canada. 1984
  18. ^ "To Serve Canada: A History of the Royal Military College since the Second World War", Ottawa, University of Ottawa Press, 1991.
  19. ^ DCOM. "Choix de 4A des promotions précédentes – Orientation 4A". portail.polytechnique.edu.
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  30. ^ "1000 TFG Somali soldiers passed out at Bihanga military training".
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  39. ^ "Факультет підготовки офіцерів запасу Національний університет оборони України Київський (військова кафедра)". www.nudu.io.ua. Archived from the original on January 19, 2021. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
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