I talked to a lot of student/veterans and they thought that it was the way they learn that was changed by the military culture more than anything else. The disconnect between the "civilian" world and them was secondary.
Thousands of veterans failing in latest battlefield: college
By Bill Briggs
Among the approximately 800,000 military veterans now attending U.S. colleges, an estimated 88 percent drop out of school during their first year and only 3 percent graduate, according a report forwarded by the University of Colorado Denver, citing the analysis by U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education and Labor and Pensions.
During a pair of six-month stints in and around Fallujah, Iraq – then a fiercely volatile city – Navy corpsman Lucas Velasquez came to know about life. And death.
From late 2005 through early 2007, not long after nearly 100 U.S. troops and more than 1,350 insurgents were killed in Fallujah during Operation Phantom Fury, Velasquez routinely rendered emergency aid to wounded Marines while ducking bullets, rocket-propelled grenades and IED blasts. In uniform, Velasquez was smart and quick, adept at practicing field medicine literally while under the gun.
In 2007, after retiring from the Navy, Velasquez, then 23, enrolled at Columbus State University in western Georgia. He promptly failed four of his first six classes.
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