By Lt. Col. Chandra Pasillas and Maj. William Graff
Posted Thursday, February 20, 2025
(Image licensed from Shutterstock.com)
Did you know the Air Force’s Basic Meteorology Program (BMP)
has existed almost as long as the U.S. Air Force? Along with the desire for
timely and accurate aviation forecasts, meteorologists were needed to lead
weather teams at military bases worldwide to supply resource protection on the
ground. BMP was the Air Force’s mechanism for creating weather experts when
faced with shortfalls of atmospheric science graduates from civilian
institutions (CIs) and at times has provided the community with one-third of
its new officers.
From 1952-1993, BMP graduated 20-30 students yearly from
CIs. With the startup of the USAFA Atmospheric Science Program in the early
1990s, the SECAF directed BMP stand down. Successive years of not meeting 15W
accession goals through meteorology degree programs alone saw the reinstatement
of BMP in 1998 at Texas A&M, Florida State University, and The Ohio State
University. Changes came again in 2003 when education agreements between the
Navy and Air Force moved BMP to the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS). Modifications
to World Meteorological Organizations (WMO) requirements drove further updates
to Air Force officer accessions in the early 2010s, halting BMP graduates from
2010-2017. Then, the program was revived at NPS where it graduated between
10-15 students each year. The final BMP students at NPS graduated in 2024.
Fall 2024 marked the transfer of BMP to the Air Force’s
premier graduate school—the Air Force Institute of Technology at
Wright-Patterson AFB in Ohio—and a landmark upgrade to the credentials it
confers. The latest update comes as part of a larger effort by the Air Force to
not only improve talent and resource management, but also enable new mentorship
opportunities for its junior members. The move to AFIT as a graduate
certificate program offers additional benefits. Officers will enter their
careers by receiving the designation of “Bachelors +” on their records,
indicating the completion of advanced studies in graduate school. Top
performers will have the opportunity to compete to remain for three additional
quarters using BMP credits to expedite their Master’s curriculum completion,
allowing them to finish an advanced academic degree before their first duty
station.
The program draws applicants from related disciplines,
equipping them with essential skills required by the U.S. Government and World
Meteorological Organization (WMO) to produce operational weather analyses and
forecasts. BMP boasts a double-edged benefit for the Air Force, as the graduate
emerges with the skills required to do their tradecraft and the weather
community gains a Subject Matter Expert with intimate knowledge of their
non-weather undergraduate degree. Notable BMP grads include current and former
AFIT Professors Dr. Steve Fiorino (Lt. Col., Ret.), Dr. Bob Tournay (Lt. Col.,
Ret.), and Dr. Andrew Geyer (Lt. Col., Ret.), as well as former 557th Weather
Wing Commander Col. Brad Stebbins.
AFIT hosts students at different points in their career.
Because of this, it has a robust infrastructure to help students refresh and
improve their command of physics and calculus. Waivers are possible, but a
minimum amount of related coursework is still required for BMP before entry.
Following refresher sessions, students begin with an introduction to
Meteorology that arms them with fundamental knowledge for the rest of the
program which includes coursework in topics such as radiative transfer, instrumentation,
observation, thermodynamics, the space environment, forecasting, and
atmospheric dynamics.
The BMP pulls from the spectrum of academic methods, drawing
in cutting-edge teaching methods like active learning themes that allow young
officers to apply newfound knowledge to boost knowledge retention. The program
will also pioneer AFIT’s new DIYNamics labs where students will create
table-sized 3D atmospheres that show the evolution of features like baroclinic
development and thermal wind. The BMP’s capstone course will be distinct to
AFIT, led by seasoned Weather and Environmental Sciences Officer (WESO)
leaders, it will prepare students for their military careers by exposing them
to real-world challenges and vignettes from across the spectrum of operations
in weather, environmental science, and space.
The BMP will be piloted in AFIT’s Department of Engineering Physics by Atmospheric Science cadre, Lt. Col. Kyle Fitch, Assistant Professor
of Atmospheric Science, Lt. Col. Chandra Pasillas, Assistant Professor of
Atmospheric Science, and Maj. William Graff, Instructor of Atmospheric Science.
The program is currently open to applicants for its fall 2025 class. If you
know of a future Air Force officer wrapping up their undergraduate degree or
prospective cross-trainee, encourage them to submit their application. Contact
AFIT Atmospheric Science Program team members for more details at https://e.AFIT.edu/980WK.
MORE INFORMATION
Visit the BMP Certificate web page:
https://e.AFIT.edu/ZZ0ggHdd
Apply to AFIT online:
https://www.AFIT.edu/ADMISSIONS/AFITApplicationProcess/