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Marine Corps University

Marine Corps University is a military education university system of the United States Marine Corps.[1] It is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award Master's Degrees.[2]

Marine Corps University
TypeUniversity system
EstablishedAugust 1, 1989
Parent institution
United States Marine Corps Training and Education Command
PresidentBrigadier General Maura M. Hennigan
ProvostDr. Rebecca J. Johnson
Location,
United states of America
Websiteusmcu.edu

History

Marine Corps University (MCU) was founded on 1 August 1989 by order of the Commandant of the Marine Corps, General Alfred M. Gray.  The University can trace its roots back to World War I and the birth of the modern Marine Corps. General Gray’s decision to establish MCU was a logical extension of the historical legacy of many famous Marine leaders who valued the importance of education, as well as a natural extension of the contemporary shift of the Corps’ war-fighting doctrine to one of “manoeuvre warfare,” with its concomitant demand for leaders who can think critically and act decisively in the face of ambiguity, fog, friction, and chance.

The Marine Corps University's history dates back to 1891 when 29 company officers attended the School of Application. This facility became the Officers Training School in 1909, and later relocated to Marine Corps Base Quantico. In 1919, Major General John A. Lejeune ordered the creation of the Marine Corps Officers Training School. Brigadier General Smedley D. Butler established the Field Officers Course in October 1920 and the Company Grade Officers Course in July 1921.

World War I was pivotal in Major General Lejeune's decision to ensure Marines of all ranks were educated in the art and science of war. Brigadier General Butler later built upon General Lejeune’s concepts by developing two additional courses of instruction. The first, called the Field Officers School, welcomed its inaugural class in October 1920. The second, the Company Grade Officers School, convened its first class in July 1921. These two courses, along with the basic Marine Corps Officer Training School, soon renamed The Basic School, formed the foundation for what General Lejeune termed “Marine Corps Schools.” It was this beginning that formed the basis of the Marine Corps University that exists today.

Between World War I and World War II, Marine Corps education began focusing on its future fight, specifically the study and development of amphibious warfare. In the late 1920s, comprehensive instruction in amphibious operations was developed and implemented in anticipation of the demanding requirements of this new mission. Acknowledging that not all Marine Corps officers would have the opportunity to attend resident courses, the Marine Corps began implementing correspondence courses to reach a wider breadth of potential students.

Beginning in 1930, Brigadier General James C. Breckinridge led a comprehensive redesign of the entire curriculum of all Marine Corps Schools, emphasising amphibious warfare and close air support.  Breckinridge required his officers to not only become specialists in this new “Marine Corps Science,” he also demanded they become skilled instructors. He formed special groups from selected Field Officers School graduates and students to work on amphibious doctrine and requirements. In fact, General Breckinridge temporarily discontinued Field Officers School classes so that the staff and students could devote their full attention to developing the new doctrine.

Over the next several decades, Marine Corps education would consolidate and evolve. Brigadier General Breckinridge led efforts to re-designate company and field grade courses as "Amphibious Warfare" courses. In 1946, the Marine Corps revisited using its previous, three-tiered system, incorporating lessons learned from World War II. In the 1950s, the curricula began to reflect new technologies such as vertical envelopment. On 1 August 1964, the Amphibious Warfare Senior Course was re-designated as the Command and Staff College (CSC). At the same time, the Amphibious Warfare Junior Course became the Amphibious Warfare School (AWS).

Recognizing the need for enhanced enlisted education, on 16 February 1971, the Marine Corps convened the first course of the Staff Noncommissioned Officer Academy at Quantico, Virginia. This was the first of many additions to the Marine Corps professional military education continuum. Ten years later, in 1981, the Noncommissioned Officer Basic Course at 18 sites and a “Senior Course” for Staff Sergeants at Quantico, Virginia were also established. Finally, in 1982, an “Advanced Course” for First Sergeants and Master Sergeants was implemented at Quantico, Virginia.

On 6 March 1989, FMFM-1 (later, MCDP-1) Warfighting was published. This foundational document would cement the Marine Corps' commitment to manoeuvre warfare and initiate a modernisation of the professional military education system. Thus, General Gray ordered the consolidation of five independent Marine Corps schools into a single Marine Corps University.

Now that Marine Corps University was a single entity, the institution underwent several growths in the 1990s. The Marine Corps War College (MCWAR) was established as the senior-level officer professional military education school, the Advanced Course was moved down to Gunnery Sergeants, and a new First Sergeants course was established. Additionally, a Commanders' Course for all Lieutenant Colonels and Colonels slated for command was instituted, along with annual E-8 Seminars and E-9 Symposiums. Lastly, in 1997, the College of Continuing Education was created to house all officer and enlisted distance education programs under one roof.

In 1999, MCU marked a major milestone in the maturation of its educational programs as the University was accredited by the prestigious Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award a master’s degree at the Command and Staff College. This was followed shortly thereafter by accreditation of the master’s degrees of both the Marine Corps War College (2001) and the School of Advanced Warfighting (2003).

In 2002, the Amphibious Warfare School and the Command and Control Systems Course merged to become the Expeditionary Warfare School (EWS). The following year the Senior Leader Development Program (SLDP) was created to manage General Officer education. The SLDP later evolved to become the Executive Education Program (EEP) under the auspices of a new entity at MCU – the Lejeune Leadership Institute (LLI) – which is responsible for the development of leadership programs across the Marine Corps.

In 2005, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools reaffirmed the regional accreditation of MCU’s three graduate degrees. This was followed in 2010 by the successful submission of the University’s Fifth Year Interim Report to the Commission. In December 2015 the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools once again reaffirmed the regional accreditation of MCU’s three graduate degrees.[citation needed]

Recent changes at MCU include the establishment of the Brute Krulak Center for Innovation and Future Warfare, or the “Krulak Center” for short, and the re-designation of the Enlisted Professional Military Education (EPME) directorate as the College of Enlisted Military Education (CEME).[3]

Degree programs

  • Marine Corps War College: On 1 August 1989, the 29th Commandant of the Marine Corps, General Alfred M. Gray, Jr., instituted the Art of War Studies program under the Marine Corps Command and Staff College. Today the mission of the Marine Corps War College is to develop, deliver, and evaluate professional military education and training through resident and nonresident programs to prepare leaders for the national security environment and to preserve, promote, and display the history and heritage of the Marine Corps. Its graduates are prepared for senior leadership positions of increasing complexity through the study of national military strategy, teather strategy and plans, and military support to those strategies within the context of national security policies and decision-making. Graduates receive a Master of Strategic Studies (MSS) degree.[4]
  • Marine Corps Command and Staff College: including the study of history, language and culture, CSC educates and trains its joint, multinational, and interagency professionals in order to produce skilled war-fighting leaders for 21st Century security challenges. Command and Staff College offers students the option of completing the requirements for a Master of Military Studies (MMS) degree.[5]
  • School of Advanced War-fighting: The School of Advanced War-fighting provides a follow-on, graduate-level professional military education for selected field grade officers who have completed the Marine Corps or sister service command and staff college course. The course develops complex problem solving and decision making skills for the operational level of war. Graduates receive a Master of Operational Studies (MOS) degree.[6]

Schools, programs and courses

Expeditionary Warfare School

Formerly Amphibious Warfare School (AWS), the mission of the Expeditionary Warfare School (EWS) is to provide Marine captains career-level professional military education and oversee their professional military training in command and control, MAGTF operations ashore, and naval expeditionary operations. This is intended to enable them to command or serve as primary staff officers in their MOS, integrate the capabilities resident within their element of the MAGTF, integrate their element within the MAGTF, and understand the functions of the other elements of the MAGTF.[7]

Marine Corps Command and Staff College (CSC)

The Marine Corps Command and Staff College provides graduate level education and training to develop critical thinkers, innovative problem solvers, and ethical leaders to serve as commanders and staff officers in service, joint, interagency, intergovernmental, and multinational organisations. The Command and Staff College is a ten-month program for majors, lieutenant commanders, allied foreign officers, and U.S. government civilian professionals that fulfils Joint Professional Military Education Phase I requirements. Students come from all branches of the US Armed Forces. Students have the option of completing the requirements for a Master of Military Studies (MMS) degree. MCU-CSC is also known for its civilian faculty members, many of whom conduct research into national security issues.[8]

Marine Corps War College (MCWAR)

School of Advanced War-fighting

 
School of Advanced Warfighting

The mission of the School of Advanced Warfighting (SAW) is to develop lead planners and future commanders with the will and intellect to solve complex problems, employ operational art, and design and execute campaigns .

Enlisted Professional Military Education

The mission of the Enlisted Professional Military Education branch is to provide progressive educational opportunities to improve leadership, critical thinking capability and sound tactical skills for enlisted Marines.[9]

School of MAGTF Logistics

The mission of the School of Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF) Logistics (SOML) is to provide the logistics education for the Marine Corps, and to manage the logistics education programs in order to increase the combat effectiveness of Marine Corps operating forces, Marine Forces Reserve, the supporting establishment, and Headquarters Marine Corps.[10]

Other programs

  • College of Distance Education and Training[citation needed]
  • Professional Development Division includes the Commanders' Program, Professional Reading, and Senior Leader Development Program
  • Staff Non-commissioned Officer Academy
  • Center for Regional and Security Studies[11]

Marine Corps University Press

Marine Corps University Press is a university press affiliated with Marine Corps University. It is located in Quantico, Virginia.[12][13] The press is currently a member of the Association of University Presses.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ "About Marine Corps University". Retrieved August 29, 2019.
  2. ^ . Marine Corps University. Archived from the original on February 23, 2015. Retrieved March 9, 2015.
  3. ^ "History of MCU". www.usmcu.edu. Retrieved October 18, 2021.
  4. ^ . Marine Corps University. Archived from the original on February 23, 2015. Retrieved March 9, 2015.
  5. ^ . Marine Corps University. Archived from the original on April 30, 2011. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  6. ^ . Marine Corps University. Archived from the original on July 23, 2011. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  7. ^ "Expeditionary Warfare School". Marine Corps University. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  8. ^ "Command and Staff College". Marine Corps University.
  9. ^ . Marine Corps University. Archived from the original on May 16, 2011. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  10. ^ "School of MAGTF Logistics". Marine Corps University. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  11. ^ "DIVESTMENT OF CENTER FOR ADVANCED OPERATIONAL CULTURE LEARNING AND ESTABLISHMENT OF THE MA". www.marines.mil. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  12. ^ "About MCUP". Marine Corps University Press. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  13. ^ "Contact Us". Marine Corps University Press. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  14. ^ "Our Members". Association of University Presses. Retrieved January 30, 2023.
  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps.
  • . United States Marine Corps. Archived from the original on February 24, 2015. Retrieved March 9, 2015.

External links

  • . Archived from the original on August 1, 2013. Retrieved August 29, 2019.

marine, corps, university, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Marine Corps University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Marine Corps University is a military education university system of the United States Marine Corps 1 It is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award Master s Degrees 2 Marine Corps UniversityTypeUniversity systemEstablishedAugust 1 1989Parent institutionUnited States Marine Corps Training and Education CommandPresidentBrigadier General Maura M HenniganProvostDr Rebecca J JohnsonLocationMarine Corps Base Quantico Virginia United states of AmericaWebsiteusmcu wbr edu Contents 1 History 2 Degree programs 3 Schools programs and courses 3 1 Expeditionary Warfare School 3 2 Marine Corps Command and Staff College CSC 3 3 Marine Corps War College MCWAR 3 3 1 School of Advanced War fighting 3 3 2 Enlisted Professional Military Education 3 3 3 School of MAGTF Logistics 3 4 Other programs 4 Marine Corps University Press 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditMarine Corps University MCU was founded on 1 August 1989 by order of the Commandant of the Marine Corps General Alfred M Gray The University can trace its roots back to World War I and the birth of the modern Marine Corps General Gray s decision to establish MCU was a logical extension of the historical legacy of many famous Marine leaders who valued the importance of education as well as a natural extension of the contemporary shift of the Corps war fighting doctrine to one of manoeuvre warfare with its concomitant demand for leaders who can think critically and act decisively in the face of ambiguity fog friction and chance The Marine Corps University s history dates back to 1891 when 29 company officers attended the School of Application This facility became the Officers Training School in 1909 and later relocated to Marine Corps Base Quantico In 1919 Major General John A Lejeune ordered the creation of the Marine Corps Officers Training School Brigadier General Smedley D Butler established the Field Officers Course in October 1920 and the Company Grade Officers Course in July 1921 World War I was pivotal in Major General Lejeune s decision to ensure Marines of all ranks were educated in the art and science of war Brigadier General Butler later built upon General Lejeune s concepts by developing two additional courses of instruction The first called the Field Officers School welcomed its inaugural class in October 1920 The second the Company Grade Officers School convened its first class in July 1921 These two courses along with the basic Marine Corps Officer Training School soon renamed The Basic School formed the foundation for what General Lejeune termed Marine Corps Schools It was this beginning that formed the basis of the Marine Corps University that exists today Between World War I and World War II Marine Corps education began focusing on its future fight specifically the study and development of amphibious warfare In the late 1920s comprehensive instruction in amphibious operations was developed and implemented in anticipation of the demanding requirements of this new mission Acknowledging that not all Marine Corps officers would have the opportunity to attend resident courses the Marine Corps began implementing correspondence courses to reach a wider breadth of potential students Beginning in 1930 Brigadier General James C Breckinridge led a comprehensive redesign of the entire curriculum of all Marine Corps Schools emphasising amphibious warfare and close air support Breckinridge required his officers to not only become specialists in this new Marine Corps Science he also demanded they become skilled instructors He formed special groups from selected Field Officers School graduates and students to work on amphibious doctrine and requirements In fact General Breckinridge temporarily discontinued Field Officers School classes so that the staff and students could devote their full attention to developing the new doctrine Over the next several decades Marine Corps education would consolidate and evolve Brigadier General Breckinridge led efforts to re designate company and field grade courses as Amphibious Warfare courses In 1946 the Marine Corps revisited using its previous three tiered system incorporating lessons learned from World War II In the 1950s the curricula began to reflect new technologies such as vertical envelopment On 1 August 1964 the Amphibious Warfare Senior Course was re designated as the Command and Staff College CSC At the same time the Amphibious Warfare Junior Course became the Amphibious Warfare School AWS Recognizing the need for enhanced enlisted education on 16 February 1971 the Marine Corps convened the first course of the Staff Noncommissioned Officer Academy at Quantico Virginia This was the first of many additions to the Marine Corps professional military education continuum Ten years later in 1981 the Noncommissioned Officer Basic Course at 18 sites and a Senior Course for Staff Sergeants at Quantico Virginia were also established Finally in 1982 an Advanced Course for First Sergeants and Master Sergeants was implemented at Quantico Virginia On 6 March 1989 FMFM 1 later MCDP 1 Warfighting was published This foundational document would cement the Marine Corps commitment to manoeuvre warfare and initiate a modernisation of the professional military education system Thus General Gray ordered the consolidation of five independent Marine Corps schools into a single Marine Corps University Now that Marine Corps University was a single entity the institution underwent several growths in the 1990s The Marine Corps War College MCWAR was established as the senior level officer professional military education school the Advanced Course was moved down to Gunnery Sergeants and a new First Sergeants course was established Additionally a Commanders Course for all Lieutenant Colonels and Colonels slated for command was instituted along with annual E 8 Seminars and E 9 Symposiums Lastly in 1997 the College of Continuing Education was created to house all officer and enlisted distance education programs under one roof In 1999 MCU marked a major milestone in the maturation of its educational programs as the University was accredited by the prestigious Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges SACSCOC to award a master s degree at the Command and Staff College This was followed shortly thereafter by accreditation of the master s degrees of both the Marine Corps War College 2001 and the School of Advanced Warfighting 2003 In 2002 the Amphibious Warfare School and the Command and Control Systems Course merged to become the Expeditionary Warfare School EWS The following year the Senior Leader Development Program SLDP was created to manage General Officer education The SLDP later evolved to become the Executive Education Program EEP under the auspices of a new entity at MCU the Lejeune Leadership Institute LLI which is responsible for the development of leadership programs across the Marine Corps In 2005 the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools reaffirmed the regional accreditation of MCU s three graduate degrees This was followed in 2010 by the successful submission of the University s Fifth Year Interim Report to the Commission In December 2015 the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools once again reaffirmed the regional accreditation of MCU s three graduate degrees citation needed Recent changes at MCU include the establishment of the Brute Krulak Center for Innovation and Future Warfare or the Krulak Center for short and the re designation of the Enlisted Professional Military Education EPME directorate as the College of Enlisted Military Education CEME 3 Degree programs EditMarine Corps War College On 1 August 1989 the 29th Commandant of the Marine Corps General Alfred M Gray Jr instituted the Art of War Studies program under the Marine Corps Command and Staff College Today the mission of the Marine Corps War College is to develop deliver and evaluate professional military education and training through resident and nonresident programs to prepare leaders for the national security environment and to preserve promote and display the history and heritage of the Marine Corps Its graduates are prepared for senior leadership positions of increasing complexity through the study of national military strategy teather strategy and plans and military support to those strategies within the context of national security policies and decision making Graduates receive a Master of Strategic Studies MSS degree 4 Marine Corps Command and Staff College including the study of history language and culture CSC educates and trains its joint multinational and interagency professionals in order to produce skilled war fighting leaders for 21st Century security challenges Command and Staff College offers students the option of completing the requirements for a Master of Military Studies MMS degree 5 School of Advanced War fighting The School of Advanced War fighting provides a follow on graduate level professional military education for selected field grade officers who have completed the Marine Corps or sister service command and staff college course The course develops complex problem solving and decision making skills for the operational level of war Graduates receive a Master of Operational Studies MOS degree 6 Schools programs and courses EditExpeditionary Warfare School Edit Formerly Amphibious Warfare School AWS the mission of the Expeditionary Warfare School EWS is to provide Marine captains career level professional military education and oversee their professional military training in command and control MAGTF operations ashore and naval expeditionary operations This is intended to enable them to command or serve as primary staff officers in their MOS integrate the capabilities resident within their element of the MAGTF integrate their element within the MAGTF and understand the functions of the other elements of the MAGTF 7 Marine Corps Command and Staff College CSC Edit The Marine Corps Command and Staff College provides graduate level education and training to develop critical thinkers innovative problem solvers and ethical leaders to serve as commanders and staff officers in service joint interagency intergovernmental and multinational organisations The Command and Staff College is a ten month program for majors lieutenant commanders allied foreign officers and U S government civilian professionals that fulfils Joint Professional Military Education Phase I requirements Students come from all branches of the US Armed Forces Students have the option of completing the requirements for a Master of Military Studies MMS degree MCU CSC is also known for its civilian faculty members many of whom conduct research into national security issues 8 Marine Corps War College MCWAR Edit Main article Marine Corps War College School of Advanced War fighting Edit School of Advanced WarfightingThe mission of the School of Advanced Warfighting SAW is to develop lead planners and future commanders with the will and intellect to solve complex problems employ operational art and design and execute campaigns Enlisted Professional Military Education Edit The mission of the Enlisted Professional Military Education branch is to provide progressive educational opportunities to improve leadership critical thinking capability and sound tactical skills for enlisted Marines 9 School of MAGTF Logistics Edit The mission of the School of Marine Air Ground Task Force MAGTF Logistics SOML is to provide the logistics education for the Marine Corps and to manage the logistics education programs in order to increase the combat effectiveness of Marine Corps operating forces Marine Forces Reserve the supporting establishment and Headquarters Marine Corps 10 Other programs Edit College of Distance Education and Training citation needed Professional Development Division includes the Commanders Program Professional Reading and Senior Leader Development Program Staff Non commissioned Officer Academy Center for Regional and Security Studies 11 Marine Corps University Press EditMarine Corps University Press is a university press affiliated with Marine Corps University It is located in Quantico Virginia 12 13 The press is currently a member of the Association of University Presses 14 See also EditAir University Army University Center for Advanced Operational Culture LearningReferences Edit About Marine Corps University Retrieved August 29 2019 Accreditation and Degree granting Authority Marine Corps University Archived from the original on February 23 2015 Retrieved March 9 2015 History of MCU www usmcu edu Retrieved October 18 2021 Marine Corps War College Marine Corps University Archived from the original on February 23 2015 Retrieved March 9 2015 Command and Staff College Marine Corps University Archived from the original on April 30 2011 Retrieved May 13 2011 School of Advanced Warfighting Marine Corps University Archived from the original on July 23 2011 Retrieved May 13 2011 Expeditionary Warfare School Marine Corps University Retrieved May 13 2011 Command and Staff College Marine Corps University Enlisted Professional Military Education Marine Corps University Archived from the original on May 16 2011 Retrieved May 13 2011 School of MAGTF Logistics Marine Corps University Retrieved May 13 2011 DIVESTMENT OF CENTER FOR ADVANCED OPERATIONAL CULTURE LEARNING AND ESTABLISHMENT OF THE MA www marines mil Retrieved January 6 2023 About MCUP Marine Corps University Press Retrieved February 22 2023 Contact Us Marine Corps University Press Retrieved February 22 2023 Our Members Association of University Presses Retrieved January 30 2023 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps Marine Corps University History United States Marine Corps Archived from the original on February 24 2015 Retrieved March 9 2015 External links Edit Marine Corps University website Archived from the original on August 1 2013 Retrieved August 29 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marine Corps University amp oldid 1165300153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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