The Global Maritime and Transportation School
at the
United States Merchant Marine Academy
Kings Point, New York
Mission
The primary mission of the USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School is to
offer leading edge education and training programs that will benefit professionals from
the maritime and transportation industry (private-sector, military, and government).
Through its education, training and research initiatives, the USMMA GMATS is dedicated to optimizing
Americas economic and strategic intermodal transportation system and its global
transportation interests.
Further,
the USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School seeks to encourage
worldwide trade by providing mariners and international transportation, and
business professionals with the requisite skills needed to operate
intermodal transportation systems in the worldwide economy that are safe,
efficient, and environmentally compliant.
History
Continuing Education for professionals in the maritime industry began at Kings Point in
the 1960s with the Nuclear Ship Savannah Project. At the time, engineers assigned to
the Savannah received specialized nuclear engineering training at USMMA. This same model
was adopted in the 1980s with the change from steam to diesel power in the American
Merchant Marine and dozens of marine engineers trained at Kings Point in order to be
qualified to crew up slow speed diesel vessels. In addition, during the 1980s the
Maritime Administration sponsored the development and implementation of the "National
Sealift Training Program" that is designed to train ships officers and naval
reservists who would be called upon to crew strategic sealift vessels during times of
national emergency. During the late 1980s and early 1990s continuing education
programs at Kings Point were loosely organized under an alumni organization known as the
U.S. Maritime Resource Center.
The U.S. Merchant Marine Academy was reviewed in the early 90s by the Vice
Presidents National Performance Review, the Department of Transportations
Inspector General Office, and by members of Congress. Although the scrutiny of Kings Point
unequivocally demonstrated the vital role of the Academy, it was felt that USMMA needed to
use its unique resources to even better serve the education and training needs of the
transportation industry: commercial, government, and military. It was also clear that no
additional federal funds would be made available to make this happen.
Responding to this mandate, the Academy established USMMA Continuing Education in 1994
as a "non-appropriate fund instrumentality" (NAFI) of USMMA, the Maritime
Administration and the Department of Transportation. As a NAFI, the program is entirely
self-funded through tuition and fees. Reflecting the growth and diversity of USMMA
Continuing Education, the name of the program was changed in 1999 to the USMMA Global
Maritime and Transportation School (GMATS).
USMMA GMATS Today
The USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School is currently divided into three
divisions:
Together these divisions offer more than 140 professional
education and training programs. In addition, GMATS specializes in developing customized
education and training programs that meet the specific needs of any transportation
organization. With nearly 4000 students annually attending its
programs, USMMA GMATS has become an important supplier of maritime and
transportation training for personnel from numerous
government, military, and commercial entities.
GMATS relies on more than 300 subject matter experts to provide
instruction in its programs. This faculty brings a wealth of diversity and talent to the classroom. Instructors
include USMMA faculty, academia from other colleges and universities, and guest lecturers
from private-sector, military, and government organizations who are experts
in their field. In keeping with the Kings Point tradition, where appropriate, classroom
presentation is augmented by extensive use of the Academys laboratories, simulators,
and waterfront vessels. Transportation related courses generally include field visits to
intermodal facilities in the Port of New York/New Jersey.
Master's Degree Programs
In 2000, USMMA GMATS began a partnership with the American Military
University (AMU). Under the degree granting authority of AMU, USMMA GMATS
participates in an MA degree in Transportation Management. USMMA
GMATS offers numerous courses that are accredited for the master's
degree. Approximately 1/3 of the degree is taken in residence at
USMMA. In addition, a similar program is offered in Management with
a concentration in Maritime Engineering.
The Challenge and Vision for Tomorrow
As the next century dawns, the human factor in developing and operating Americas
maritime and intermodal transportation system becomes ever more crucial. A
recent Department of
Transportation study noted that our nations marine transportation system (and
related intermodal systems) can expect a doubling of volume within twenty years.
"We are at a crossroads in the transportation field. Much
the nations seasoned workforce is retiring. Meanwhile the demand for both
traditional and new skills is expanding. America must develop the human resources needed
to design, deploy, operate, and maintain an integrated and seamless national
transportation system."
It is clear that the role of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, both within the
undergraduate program and within GMATS will become increasingly vital to Americas
strategic and economic transportation interests. To help meet the challenge of training
Americas transportation professionals, the USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation
School has developed partnership arrangements with nearly twenty prominent transportation
associations and organizations, including:
GMATS has also formed a Board of Advisors that includes more than thirty of Americas top leaders in the intermodal transportation industry.
With its many partner associations in the transportation industry and guidance from its
Board of Advisors, the USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School is committed
"to being a world leader in providing professional education in maritime activities,
intermodal transportation, and logistics."
Funding
The USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School
is a “non-appropriated fund instrumentality” (NAFI) of the U.S.
Merchant Marine Academy, Maritime Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation. As such, USMMA GMATS is a wholly owned government entity that
is funded without direct federal revenues.
Funds to operate USMMA GMATS are generated through tuition, meal,
and lodging fees.
Although the USMMA Global Maritime and
Transportation School operates with non-appropriated funds, GMATS is part
of the United States Merchant Marine Academy.
By providing
innovative education and training programs, the School is designed to
support the mission of the Academy, the Maritime Administration, and the
Department of Transportation.
As
a Non-Appropriated Fund, USMMA GMATS is authorized to enter into contractual
agreements with private-sector organizations that wish to utilize its
consulting, education, and training service
Hammer Award
GMATS
was recently presented the prestigious “Hammer Award” to the
USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School.
The Award is presented to Federal employees and partner
organizations whose work has resulted in a government that works better
and costs less. The Hammer Award is presented to teams, not individuals;
real accomplishments, not plans; innovative reinvention, not day to day
business. To be awarded a
Hammer, the team must be able to demonstrate measurable, observable
results of its accomplishments in one or more areas: putting customers
first, cutting red tape, empowering employees to get results, cutting back
to basics or getting results Americans care about.
The award is an acknowledgement of work characterized by excellence
and new exemplary ways of doing government business.
The
Hammer Award presented to USMMA GMATS noted:
"The
USMMA GMATS team reinvented a small, limited continuing education program
by leveraging the existing federal investment in USMMA's well-respected
undergraduate program. The result is a new non-appropriated fund,
U.S. government education and training resource that provides over 140
leading-edge, cost-effective programs that are designed to improve
America's economic and strategic intermodal transportation system.
Today's USMMA GMATS offers the most extensive maritime and transportation
professional education program in the United States. It is notable
that in the early 1990's, the NPR reviewed the value of USMMA to the
taxpayer and considered closure of the Academy. In 1999, the NPR is
offering USMMA the presitigious Hammer Award for reinventing
government."
Teaching
Philosophy
USMMA
Global Maritime and Transportation School instructors include dozens
outstanding faculty from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and other
leading academic institutions. In
addition, USMMA GMATS utilizes hundreds of guest lecturers and experts
from the maritime and transportation industry including those from
government, military, and private-sector organizations.
Classroom lecture and discussion are augmented as much as possible
by practice “hands-on” experiential training.
Whether using the Academy’s excellent nautical science and
engineering simulators, laboratories, waterfront vessels and equipment, or
visiting intermodal transportation facilities in the Port of New York/New
Jersey, USMMA Global Maritime and Transportation School students are
exposed to the Best
Education and Training Available.
Undergraduate
Program - United States Merchant Marine Academy
Ever since its founding in 1943, the United States
Merchant Marine Academy has been preparing young men and women for
leadership roles. The
undergraduate mission of Kings Point is to “educate and graduate
officers and leaders of honor and integrity who are dedicated to serving
the economic and defense interests of the United States in our armed
forces and Merchant Marine, and who will contribute to an intermodal
transportation system that effectively ties America together.
A federal institution of higher learning, the Academy is operated
by the Maritime Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation.
The undergraduate enrollment includes 950 students from all fifty
states and several foreign nations.
Midshipmen at the United States Merchant Marine
Academy enjoy a unique learning experience.
At the Academy, midshipmen engage in rigorous academic studies
focusing in either marine transportation or marine engineering related
fields. Additionally, all
students are required to pursue studies and examinations leading to a U.S.
Coast Guard license as a third mate or third assistant engineer.
In addition to Marine Transportation and Marine Engineering,
academic majors also include Intermodal Transportation and Logistics,
Shipyard Management, and Systems Engineering.
Student life at the Academy is demanding.
Along with the exacting academic program, discipline and leadership
are instilled through a regimental system.
Further, midshipmen spend nearly one of their four years at sea,
aboard commercial vessels engaged in worldwide trade.
Students also participate in an extensive athletic and sailing
program that boasts over twenty varsity sports.
With its 83 acre waterside campus, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy
has some of the finest waterfront facilities for competitive and
recreational sailing in the country.
Midshipmen graduate with a Bachelor of Science
Degree, a U.S. Coast Guard license, and a commission in the Naval Reserve.
Midshipmen may elect a commission in any branch of the Armed
Forces. As a result, USMMA is the only federal service academy that places
graduates into each service nearly every year.
To fulfill their service obligation, graduates may
elect a variety of options, including, active duty in the military or five
years of civilian service in the maritime industry coupled with an
eight-year Naval Reserve commitment.
A recent Standard and Poor’s survey ranked the
United States Merchant Marine Academy 16th among all colleges
and universities in the nation in percentage of graduates holding senior
level executive positions in corporate America.
U.S. News and World Report recently honored the technical
achievements of Kings Point by ranking the Academy 18th among
the best undergraduate engineering colleges and universities in the
country.