Background:
The Navy now has a subspecialty coding system for officers based on their
undergraduate education. The program was initiated by N81, and the first
code is the 3211E code to support the navy's need for officer analysts. The
code identifies junior officers who have analytical skills and training that
qualify them to fill designated shore billets that involve analytical
studies important to the future of the U.S. Navy. Officers with a 3211E code
will be given special consideration for assignment to Naval Postgraduate (NPG)
School in Monterey to earn a masters degree.
The Navy uses subspecialty codes to identify officers with requisite
knowledge not specifically related to their warfare designator to fill
critical billets both at sea and ashore. Until recently subspecialty codes
only were awarded to officers who earned masters degrees in critical areas.
The highest level codes are P codes, which require a master’s degree program
covering critical skills designated by the navy.
The NPG School strongly supports the 3211E program; to quote the Chairman of
the OR Department. "The idea of the 3211E code is great! I believe that USNA
graduates with a technical BS, which includes the E code coursework listed
below, will be very well positioned to excel in the NPS OA curriculum. In
fact, if the coursework is sufficiently recent to allow similar coursework
at NPS to be validated, then these students should be able to finish our
program with a MSOR and the 3211P code in 6 quarters or fewer."
-
James N.
Eagle, Professor and Chairman, Operations Research Department, Naval
Postgraduate School
Three midshipmen in the class of 2002 earned the 3211E code. One of these
midshipmen, Cole Muller, entered the NPG’s master’s degree program in OR
right after graduation as a result of the Naval Academy’s Immediate
Graduated School Program. He completed his program in four quarters and
converted his E code into a P code. He is the first officer to earn a 3211P
code in four quarters.
Ten midshipmen in the class of 2003 earned the 3211E code.