By Jeff Murphy,
January 25, 2021
WARRENSBURG, MO 鈥 A focus on excellence has contributed to a successful Army ROTC program at the 欧美视频, recently evident by the Fighting Mules Battalion
earning top-three honors in three award categories among battalions across a nine-state
region.
Housed within the university鈥檚 School of Public Services, UCM鈥檚 battalion is part
of a military brigade that includes 41 different programs. In the annual awards recognition
program, UCM captured first place as the Most Improved Battalion, second place as
the Best in Recruiting and Retention, and third place as Best Overall Battalion.
鈥淔or a small university in the same brigade as many Division 1 programs, this is quite
an accomplishment for our cadets and staff,鈥 said LTC Bryan Vaden, a professor of
military science who oversees the program.
UCM currently has approximately 85 cadets enrolled in ROTC. The brigade publishes
criteria for awards in which a battalion must demonstrate success. In the area of
recruiting and retention, for example, it considers whether or not a program is meeting
its mission requirements, and if it will be able to meet its mission in future years
through projected growth in recruitment, Vaden said. It also considers how training
impacts the percentage of those cadets who go on to complete ROTC and become commissioned
as Army officers, and if the program is leveraging national platforms for recruiting
and increasing the amount of national scholarships received.
To be considered as Most Improved Battalion, according to Vadan, the brigade looks
at criteria that include the quality of cadets and the cadre鈥檚 efficiency on administrative
tasks. It also considers, 鈥淎re our cadets attaining higher GPAs? Have fitness scores
drastically improved? Are our cadets placing higher on the national order of merit
list, based on performance? Are our cadets going above and beyond with extracurricular
activities and other voluntary programs to make themselves more well rounded?鈥
Criteria related to Most Improved Battalion also help determine the Best Overall Battalion,
along with cadets鈥 performance and quality, and administrative timeliness and accuracy,
Vaden said. All such criteria provide benchmarks for UCM to assess its program against
some of the brigade鈥檚 best ROTC units.
鈥淭o me, the awards say that this program continues to perform at the highest levels
while putting the training and success of the cadets first in everything we do,鈥漋aden
said. 鈥淲e place significant emphasis on academics and fitness and foster a family
environment where cadets that join our program want to stay because they feel invested.鈥
He said the UCM ROTC program pushes its cadets beyond their comfort zones and introduces
them to levels of personal excellence they did not know they possessed.
鈥淎s a result, the cadets we have that want active duty will likely get it, and most
will get one of the top two choices in Branch,鈥 Vaden said.
The Fighting Mules Battalion is affiliated with the Military Science and Leadership
academic program at UCM. The battalion鈥檚 mission is to select, train, retrain, develop,
and commission high-quality future leaders for the U.S. Army and the nation. Additionally,
ROTC offers students an opportunity to earn a high-quality college degree while becoming
a commissioned officer.
Further demonstrating the quality and success of the UCM Fighting Mules Battalion,
Cadet Ty Cook, a junior from Harrisonville, Missouri, who is pursuing a Bachelor of
Science in Criminal Justice, also was ranked as the #6 Cadet in the nation among approximately
7,000 cadets.
Learn more about the program, which has consistently been recognized locally and nationally
as a top ROTC battalion, via email at ucmfmb@ucmo.edu or check out the program鈥檚 website at ucmo.edu/rotc.