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Awarded to cadets and officers who participate in National Cadet Special Activities. Participants must be identified by the Civil Air Patrol project officer and approved by the member's region commander. Each subsequent activity is represented by a bronze star affixed to the basic ribbon. Cadets earning this ribbon may continue to wear the ...
National Cadet Special Activities This page was last edited on 6 October 2010, at 06:39 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Dr. Cesareo Rosa Nieves Cadet Squadron (SER-PR-123), from the Puerto Rico Wing in the Southeast Region, is the only squadron to have been home to a National Champion Drill Team, National Champion Color Guard and National Cadet Competition Champion (Drill team in 2004, 2007, and 2011. Color Guard in 2012.
The Cadet Program has a mandatory aerospace education program; to progress, a cadet must take several courses and tests relating to aviation. Cadets also have educational opportunities through museum tours, National Cadet Special Activities, military and civilian orientation rides, and guest speakers. [39]
National Cadet Special Activities are Cadet Programs conducted by Civil Air Patrol. NCSAs are designed to give cadets direct hands on experience with various aspects of the Civil Air Patrol program and provide meaningful insight into several aviation-related careers. There are about 30 different special activities that a cadet may attend.
National Blue Beret (NBB) is a National Cadet Special Activity in the Civil Air Patrol. The event is two weeks long and is set up so that the second week will overlap with the annual EAA AirVenture Oshkosh event. Participants are Civil Air Patrol cadet and senior members who must go through a competitive national selection process in order to ...
Within the framework of the training programme Air Training Corps cadets have the opportunity of taking part in many activities. On most Squadrons the only compulsory activities in the ATC year are attendance at various church parades, usually ATC Sunday (to celebrate the founding of the Air Training Corps on 5 February 1941, see below) and Remembrance Sunday.
The first, second, and third placed teams from each of the six regions qualify for the national finals, held at RAF Halton in Spring each year. The competition involves a round robin of activities that include: RAF Knowledge (13 Cadets) Drill and Uniform (13 Cadets) Command Task (13 Cadets) Shooting (4 Cadets) Aircraft Recognition (4 Cadets)