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The Philippine Coast Guard Officers' Basic Education and Training Center (PCGOBETC) serves as the officer candidate school of Philippine Coast Guard officer aspirants. [1] [2] Cadets who are already baccalaureate degree holders taking the Coast Guard Officers’ Course (CGOC) became Probationary Ensigns (PENS) and after graduation are commissioned as regular officers in the organization.
The academy also offers master's degree courses in shipping business management and maritime education. The student body is referred to as the Corps of Midshipmen, and follows a rigid seniority system. Each year level is a "class".
Education in the Philippines is compulsory at the basic education level, composed of kindergarten, elementary school (grades 1–6), junior high school (grades 7–10), and senior high school (grades 11–12). [5]
In the Philippines, officer candidates are referred to RESCOM, AFPOCS and PCGOBETC students who had baccalaureate degree, foreign service academies and reserve officer pools [10] undergoing 4 months to 1 year of rigorous military training.
The Philippine National Police Academy [1] (Tagalog: Akademiyang Pampulisya ng Pilipinas) or PNPA, is a public safety school whose graduates are assigned as officers of the Philippine National Police (PNP), Philippine Public Safety College (PPSC), Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) and the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP).
at least six undergraduate courses, specifically a four-year course in liberal arts, a four-year course in science and mathematics, a four-year course in the social sciences, and; a minimum of three other active and recognized professional courses leading to government licensures; and; at least two graduate-level courses leading to doctoral ...
During the 1960s, as a need for more well-rounded individuals was found to be desirable, and socio-humanistic courses were added to the school's curriculum. On 18 March 1987, the PMA was targeted by a bomb attack that killed a colonel, two enlisted men and a civilian woman, and injured 38 people, including 17 civilians.
NCOC courses 1 to 3 were completed from April 1959 to January 1960. Philippine Army officer candidates march on the parade grounds during Balikatan 2013 at Camp O'Donnell, Tarlac. The SRC resumed its training courses when it was transferred to Camp Tinio in Bangad, Cabanatuan in 1975. After its first class (CL 1-75), the name SRC was changed to ...