Military Schools in Florida - Military High Schools (3 Military Schools Found)

Admiral Farragut Academy > >

Grades: PK-12 | 501 Park Street North, St. Petersburg, FL 33710

Originally located in Pine Beach, New Jersey, Admiral Farragut Academy (AFA) is a college preparatory school that instills military values in its students. The school is named after Admiral David Glasgow Farragut, the Navy’s first admiral, who famously uttered the phrase, “Damn the torpedoes; full steam ahead” at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864. […]

Gateway Military Academy > >

Grades: 6-12 | 1213 Hope Ln, Bonifay, FL 32425

Gateway breaks the mold in regard to today’s military schools in that it is designed just for troubled boys. It features everything required to deal with boys who are misbehaving, in trouble with the law, were expelled from school or who have below-par grades.Boys at Gateway are under adult supervision around the clock. Started as a […]

Sarasota Military Academy > >

Grades: 7-12 | 801 N. Orange Avenue Sarasota, FL 34236

Founded in 2002, Sarasota Military Academy (SMA) is a nonprofit, tuition-free, public charter school with two unique campuses offering Quality Academics, Character and Leadership Development to students in grades 6-12.Sarasota Military Academy is open to any student who resides in the Sarasota County (Florida) School District, and the Manatee and Charlotte County School Districts.  Students […]

Military Schools in Florida - Military High Schools

If you’re looking for a high school, for yourself or for your child, that will provide adequate preparation for post-education employment as well as instill the values that are essential for success in life, it’s worth considering military school.

Military high schools are typically private preparatory schools modeled on the U.S. military colleges, such as West Point (Army) or Annapolis (Navy). However, not all military high school students go on to the U.S. military colleges.  In fact, less than 10% do.  For the student who desires the structure inherent in a military prep school, to prepare for a possible military career or not, it can be an excellent boost for their career and for their life. It is a good choice for the student who needs the structure and discipline not found in normal public or private schools.

In making the determination of whether or not a military high school is the right choice, it helps to know what to expect once enrolled from a military education. Military academies are highly selective. They will only accept students who are motivated to enroll, and who are willing to comply with the strict rules under which they operate. 

Core Values Taught

Military high schools are values-based. Understanding the core values that are central to military education gives the potential student a good idea what to expect. These typically include: 

Respect: Students are expected not only to automatically, and without question, show respect to superiors, but to fellow students. Respect for the rights, property, and time of others is essential to success in life as well as academic endeavors.

Discipline: While students in all schools are expected to operate in a disciplined manner, in military schools, this is a given. The emphasis, too, is on self-discipline in addition to learning to discipline others – a key requirement for future leaders.

Accountability: In military schools, as in the military services, one is held accountable for personal actions. Students learn to accept responsibility for their acts, and to hold others accountable.

Solidarity: Military organizations function well when every member of the unit functions as part of a unified community. The grouping of students in platoons and other units during schooling helps to reinforce this sense of belonging to a larger entity, where everyone, in addition to being responsible for himself or herself, is taught to help bring others along to benefit the entire organization.

Leadership: Students in military schools are encouraged – in fact, required – to step up when needed to get the job done. They are taught to assume leadership rather than focus merely on individual achievement.

Expecting Excellence

In a military high school, all students are expected to seek opportunities for leadership and excellence in performance. Students will be expected to learn self-control, time management, and discipline. Each student, not just the brightest, will be expected to work to achieve high academic marks, improve physical fitness, and exercise leadership. Unlike public school, where a student who manages to achieve passing grades can expect to be left alone, in a military school, every student is expected to excel, and if not, they are given all the tools and tutoring needed to do so.

There is also a lot of emphasis on ethical training, integrity, spiritual development, and teamwork. Loners who do not work well in groups will quickly fall by the wayside in a military school.

Contrary to the image of some popular movies, where troublemakers are sent off to military school to be rehabilitated, military schools are not designed to change severely disruptive, unruly, or violent behavior. Only those students who are willing to accept the discipline and structure of military school are accepted, and will benefit from this excellent education. Students unwilling to engage in vigorous physical activity along with academic work aren’t good candidates for this schooling.

The purpose of military schooling is not to "change" the person, but to develop the student into a self-confident leader and an ethically responsible citizen, devoted to continuous self-improvement, not just individually, but as part of a team.

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