By Kirk R. Gray
Special to InMilitaryEducation.com
Each year the Department of Veterans Affairs evaluates the total amount available to you through the Montgomery GI Bill. Those numbers are released about this time each year, and go into effect on October 1st.
By J. Mason
Special to InMilitaryEducation.com
Advantages for online education are being talked about everyday. With MOOC’s being more available than ever, even the traditional student can take a spin with an online course. Now, new studies are exploring the thought of bringing study hall online as well. What are the advantages here for a more traditional student?
By Patricia Campbell, Ph.D.
Dean of Graduate Studies, Associate Vice President at American Military University
One common question that students often ask upon beginning their graduate studies is “What is the difference between undergraduate and graduate education?”
By Leischen Stelter, American Military University Even for someone as highly trained and experienced as Jack Reall, who has been…
By Brett Daniel Shehadey
Special Correspondent for In Homeland Security
At the Mandalay Bay Hotel, the 2015 Black Hat USA Security Conference in Las Vegas kicked off the debate Aug. 6 with some 9,000 security executives.
There is a common misconception that people seeking intelligence community jobs should only study political science or intelligence studies. Here are other degree programs to consider and how different degrees can make you marketable in the IC.
By John Ubaldi
Contributor, In Homeland Security
On July 6, President Obama traveled to the Pentagon to receive an operational update from defense and military leaders on the campaign to defeat ISIL.
By Kylie Bull
HSToday – Special to In Homeland Security
British Prime Minister David Cameron told his defense chiefs that more money should be spent on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in the fight against ISIS. He also recommended increasing funding for special forces and new spy aircraft.
CDC expert’s coronavirus worst-case scenario: “Between 160 million and 214 million people in the U.S. could be infected over the course of the epidemic.”