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They have gone on to a variety of jobs in the Army, such as the infantry, engineering, military police, computer and mechanical positions. Soldiers who went through the program have held up fairly well, said Army spokeswoman Constance Shaffery. About 11.6 percent left before a two-year term of service was up, compared with 16 percent who earned GED certificates on their own and then enlisted. About 9.4 percent of soldiers with traditional high school diplomas left before two years. Army recruiters now tell potential recruits that their chances of getting into the service are not good if they don't have a high school diploma, Shaffery said. For 20-year-old Jayson Reimers of Seattle, who had a young son to support, the GED program was a ticket out of a dead-end part-time mall job. The teachers helped him brush up on subjects he missed when he dropped out of school as a senior, and he passed the GED test on his second try. "I wanted to work on cars. I wanted a skill," said Reimers, who will head to mechanics' school here. The remaining weeks of basic training, with rifle practice, road marches and nighttime navigation tests, are less daunting for him now than schoolwork, he said, predicting he and Garcia will both finish successfully next month. "Come to our graduation!" he said with a broad smile. "We're going to make it!"
[Associated
Press;
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