The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994

This thesis examines the effect of graduate education on the career progression of Navy surface warfare officers. The probability of promotion to LCDR (O-4), CDR (O-5) and CAPT (O-6) grades as well as the probability of screening for XO and CO are used as career progression milestones. The analysis...

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Main Author: Fuchs, Kim L.
Other Authors: Stephen L. Mehay
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/32153
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-321532014-11-27T16:18:18Z The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994 Fuchs, Kim L. Stephen L. Mehay William R. Bowman This thesis examines the effect of graduate education on the career progression of Navy surface warfare officers. The probability of promotion to LCDR (O-4), CDR (O-5) and CAPT (O-6) grades as well as the probability of screening for XO and CO are used as career progression milestones. The analysis examines the effect on career outcomes of a graduate education background in general, differences in the effect of holding a Navy-funded graduate degree versus a non-funded degree, and whether the funded degree was in a technical or non-technical curricula. The thesis also investigates the effect of utilization of graduate education on career progression. Finally, the thesis examines the determinants of who decides to pursue (or is chosen to attend) a funded graduate program. The results support the conclusion that officers who select (or are selected for) the graduate education program have stronger undergraduate backgrounds and stronger job performance early in their careers. These traits raise a question of selection bias, since officers who have graduate education may have been more likely to promote even if they did not have graduate education. A test for selection bias was developed and incorporated in the career progression models. The results indicate that a fully funded graduate degree has a positive effect on the selected measures of career progression. The probability of promotion to O-6 was higher for officers who utilized their graduate degrees as an O-5 compared to those who utilized earlier in their careers. Finally, officers with non-technical graduate majors had a higher probability of promoting than those with technical majors. 2013-04-30T22:05:43Z 2013-04-30T22:05:43Z 1996-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/32153 en_US Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description This thesis examines the effect of graduate education on the career progression of Navy surface warfare officers. The probability of promotion to LCDR (O-4), CDR (O-5) and CAPT (O-6) grades as well as the probability of screening for XO and CO are used as career progression milestones. The analysis examines the effect on career outcomes of a graduate education background in general, differences in the effect of holding a Navy-funded graduate degree versus a non-funded degree, and whether the funded degree was in a technical or non-technical curricula. The thesis also investigates the effect of utilization of graduate education on career progression. Finally, the thesis examines the determinants of who decides to pursue (or is chosen to attend) a funded graduate program. The results support the conclusion that officers who select (or are selected for) the graduate education program have stronger undergraduate backgrounds and stronger job performance early in their careers. These traits raise a question of selection bias, since officers who have graduate education may have been more likely to promote even if they did not have graduate education. A test for selection bias was developed and incorporated in the career progression models. The results indicate that a fully funded graduate degree has a positive effect on the selected measures of career progression. The probability of promotion to O-6 was higher for officers who utilized their graduate degrees as an O-5 compared to those who utilized earlier in their careers. Finally, officers with non-technical graduate majors had a higher probability of promoting than those with technical majors.
author2 Stephen L. Mehay
author_facet Stephen L. Mehay
Fuchs, Kim L.
author Fuchs, Kim L.
spellingShingle Fuchs, Kim L.
The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
author_sort Fuchs, Kim L.
title The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
title_short The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
title_full The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
title_fullStr The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
title_full_unstemmed The effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
title_sort effects of the utilization of graduate education on promotion and executive officer/command screening the surface community: 1986-1994
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/32153
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