Female Veterans Already Have What it Takes
Female Veterans Already Have What it Takes
Don’t Call Me Mrs.: A Military Veteran not a Military Spouse
According to a study by the Business and Professional Women’s Foundation, many programs and policies designed to assist veterans were set up to meet the needs of male veterans from a different era.4 Women, with their competing roles as mother, wife, student, employee and unique status as veteran will need to look to each other, outside resources, and internal reserves to combat the challenges they face as they embark on the road towards completing their college degree. (Some even get a head start by taking distance learning courses while still serving.)
Furthermore, it’s critically important for a female military member to act on creating a transition plan early, prior to leaving the military. A flexible, get-it-done mindset can go a long way towards enabling a female veteran to work towards obtaining the education and career that fits her lifestyle and professional goals as a civilian. By acknowledging and actively using the core strengths developed during their military experience, female veterans can propel themselves into the life, and education, they want.
Next: Getting an Education Before and After the Military
1Women Veterans In Transition: A Research Project of Business and Professional Women’s Foundation, Building Strong Programs and Policies to Support Women Veterans, 2007, p.2
http://www.bpwfoundation.org/documents/uploads/WomensVeteransinTransitionBriefII_ForDecisionMakers.pdf
2Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Policy and Planning, Women Veterans: Past Present and Future, September 2007, p.8
http://www.va.gov/womenvet/docs/WomenVet_History.pdf
3Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Policy and Planning, Women Veterans: Past Present and Future, September 2007, p.9
http://www.va.gov/womenvet/docs/WomenVet_History.pdf
4Women Veterans In Transition: A Research Project of Business and Professional Women’s Foundation, Building Strong Programs and Policies to Support Women Veterans, 2007, p.2 http://www.bpwfoundation.org/documents/uploads/WomensVeteransinTransitionBriefII_ForDecisionMakers.pdf


