The Effect of Advanced Education on the Retention and the Promotion of Surface Warfare Officers in the U.S. Navy.
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Authors
Abunaz, Erkan
Torun, Blent
Subjects
Education
Advanced Education
Retention
Promotion
Effect of Advanced Education
Probit
Heckprob
Heckman Selection Bias
SWO
Surface Warfare Officers
Bivariate Probit Model
Biprobit
Advanced Education
Retention
Promotion
Effect of Advanced Education
Probit
Heckprob
Heckman Selection Bias
SWO
Surface Warfare Officers
Bivariate Probit Model
Biprobit
Advisors
Mehay, Stephen L.
Cunha, Jesse
Date of Issue
2012-03
Date
Mar-12
Publisher
Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
Language
Abstract
The goal of this thesis is to analyze the effect of advanced education on the retention and promotion of Navy Surface Warfare Officers (SWO). Multivariate probit models are used to estimate the effects of education, accession sources, demographic variables, and prior service status on retention and promotion. The data set used in this study is obtained from the online Navy Econometric Modeling System (NEMS). It was constructed from annual snapshots of SWO officers in the Navy between 2000 and 2011. The data set includes 73,347 officer-year observations on 14,422 officers. We create cohorts based on the entry years of the officers and track their retention between the end of their initial service obligation (four or five years), until the end of their tenth year of service. For the promotion analysis, we analyzed promotion to O-4 by the tenth year of service. The retention analysis finds that Masters degree holders and First Professional degree holders are more likely to remain in the Navy until ten years of service as compared to Baccalaureate degree holders. The promotion analysis also finds that only Masters degree holders are more likely to be promoted compared to Baccalaureate degree holders.
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Thesis
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Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.