Military Academy of the Bolivarian National Guard
The National Guard Military Academy (in Spanish Academia Militar de la Guardia Nacional Bolivariana), opened in 1936, is a military academy training future officers of the Venezuelan National Guard. It shares its campus in Caracas's Fort Tiuna with the Military Academy of the Bolivarian Army. MissionThe missions of the Military Academy of the National Guard are the following:[2]
Vision StatementThe Academy is envisioned to be:
Curriculum and academic programsJust like so many military academies in the world, the NGMA is a medium-sized, highly residential baccalaureate college, with a full-time, four-year undergraduate program that emphasizes instruction in the arts, sciences, and professions with no graduate program, preparing men and women to take on the challenge of being commissioned officers of the Venezuelan National Guard. The academy is accredited by the Ministry of Higher Education. Academic programThe academic program consists of a structured core of subjects depending on the cadet's chosen specialty as a future National Guard officer, balanced between the arts and sciences, plus additional emphasis in law enforcement. Regardless of major, all cadets graduate with a Bachelor of Science degree. Military curriculumAs all cadets are commissioned as second lieutenants upon graduation, military and leadership education is nested with academic instruction. Military training and discipline fall under the purview of the Office of the Commandant of Cadets. Entering freshmen, or 4th class cadets, are referred to as New Cadets, and enter the academy on Reception Day (in September or October ) to start off their military service training as future officers in Fort Tiuna, and are recognized as full cadets in a ceremony in November. The 2nd, 3rd and 4th years of study, aside from the usual academic work, also involve specialty training in the specialty branches of the National Guard in their respective branch training schools, public relations activities and advanced training in law enforcement. Selected cadets are also selected for foreign exchange studies in the military and police academies of Belarus, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Argentina. The Academy also has links with military and police academies in Latin America and thus also has a sizable number of foreign exchange cadets who graduate as Second Lieutenants or equivalents and with a bachelor's degree and thus return to their countries of origin to serve in their police forces. As the Corps of Cadets is structured into a Regiment, command of the Battalions and Companies fall under the responsibility of active duty officers in the rank of captain or major, unlike the academies in the US and UK and therefore following Prussian practice. There is also one senior Non-Commissioned Officer who acts as an assistant. References
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