Would my time as an Army Reservist count toward my 5 years full time employment?
Reserve work typically is 1/6 full time. In other words, adding up your drills and AT periods, you work the equivalent of 1 and 1/2 to 2 full months every year.
There's an average of 20 working days in a month (28 days, minus 2 for weekends over 4 weeks or 28 - (2*4) = 20)
Your drill periods count for 24 days (one weekend per month = 2 days over 12 months = 2*12 = 24)
Plus your normal AT period of 12 to 14 days and you're between 36 and 38 working days a year... just shy of 2 months of experience every year. So, in 6 years of Reserve service you'd have about a full extra year of experience.
Do you have any ADOS or ADT time?
@JJonathan Thank you for your inquiry! If your experience in the Army Reserve was full-time and domain related, you may use this as experience towards the five year requirement.
Best Regards,
Amanda Vance
Amanda (@amandavanceISC2),
Are you saying that you don't accept any part-time experience through the Reserves at all?
Sincerely,
Eric B.
@Baechle We do accept part-time work as long as it is in monthly increments, between 20-34 hours per week. Unfortunately, if it is only 1 weekend per month, we would not be able to accept that as experience. For any questions regarding what type of part-time is accepted, I would suggest reaching out to our Endorsement team at programs@isc2.org or call at 1-866-331-4722 option 1 and then option 3 for endorsements.
Best Regards,
Amanda Vance
Amanda (@amandavanceISC2),
Thank you for the clarification. I didn't know there was a distinction.
It may be helpful to put a footnote about that for Reservists, Guardsmen, and Veterans in the experience required section. I know quite a few reservists that represent their experience using the equation I posted above. That's how I was told to figure out my equivalent experience by representatives from the Office of Personnel Management.
Sincerely,
Eric B.
@Baechle Thank you for the suggestion! I will bring this to management for review!
Best Regards,
Amanda Vance