Discipline in Every Detail
Bloomsburg
Posted
From Fort Knox to clinical floors, şÚÁϲť´ňěČ-Bloomsburg nursing major and ROTC cadet Amanda Ott finds that leadership is less about power â and more about practice.
Amanda Ott walks through Bloomsburgâs campus in a cadetâs uniform one day and hospital scrubs the next, a living example of how two demanding callings can push a student into a different kind of adulthood before graduation.
For the junior nursing major, ROTC isnât just an extracurricular. Itâs the backbone of the discipline, confidence, and leadership sheâs already bringing into her clinical rotations.
Growing up in Reading, Pennsylvania, Ott watched her familyâs military history unfold in hushed stories â her father in Desert Storm, her grandfather in the Navy, boots on deck and submarines beneath the waves. But no one else in her family was set to follow that path.
âI knew I wanted to do something different,â Ott said. âI was thinking travel nursing, seeing new places, doing something outside of Pennsylvania. Then I realized I could be a nurse in the Army and still do that.â
Over the past three years, ROTC has reshaped how Ott sees herself. Sheâs not someone who likes change. Sheâs not the loudest in the room. But camp after camp, sheâs discovered that calm under pressure isnât something youâre born with â itâs something you practice.
At ROTC Basic Camp, she spent 30 days at Fort Knox without the luxury of a phone in her pocket. At ROTC Advanced Camp, she spent 35 days running âlanesâ â missionâstyle tactical exercises where cadets are given a scenario, plan it out, and execute it under the watchful eyes of cadre.
âMost people think thatâs miserable,â Ott said. âI thought it was fun. You get a mission, you figure out how youâre going to attack an area, you move with your team, you execute. Thatâs leadership on the fly.â
She didnât have a special lane reserved for nurses. As a cadet, she was evaluated the same as everyone else.
âOn campus, Iâm a nurse, so Iâm limited on some leadership roles because of clinicals and class load,â Ott said. âAt camp, I was treated like everybody else. I loved that. It proved to me I can do this, not just academically, but as a leader.â
One day, she was assigned platoon sergeant for 24 hours. When a situation rippled through the unit and no other leaders were immediately available, she stepped up.
âAt first ⌠I was like, âOh my God, I donât know what to do,ââ Ott said. âThen I thought, âActually, I do.â I had to adapt, try different steps, and keep moving until I got to the solution. It was an eyeâopening moment. Thatâs the same adaptable mindset Iâll need as a nurse in the field.â
A glimpse into the future
Last summer, Ott flew to Joint Base LewisâMcChord in Washington for the Army Nurse Summer Training Program. For four weeks, she rotated through seven units â emergency department, surgery, ICU, NICU, and more â working alongside Army nurses who quickly treated her less like a student and more like a junior partner.
âI got to do IVs, draw labs, give meds, do assessment,â Ott said. âEverything my nurse could do.â
She added, âIn Pennsylvania nursing programs, we canât do some of those skills because of regulations. Out there, I was able to use my knowledge and expand it.â
One day, she watched an arterial line being placed â a specialized IV that continuously monitors blood pressure. The next, she helped change dressings on a patient with a deep neck gash. In the ED and ICU, she saw the kind of rapid assessment and decisionâmaking that define highâintensity nursing.
âI already knew I didnât want to stay on a medicalâsurgical floor longâterm,â Ott said. âI want something more challenging. Thatâs why I loved the ICU and the ED. They require constant critical thinking, and thatâs what I enjoy.â
Later in the summer, she joined a fieldâstyle simulation where a âwoundedâ soldier and a working dog were brought into the same scenario.
âWe were told the dog needed a tourniquet,â Ott said. âI remember thinking, âOh, this is different.â In the field, you donât get to wait for a vet. If itâs under your care, you care for it. That kind of adaptability is exactly what the Army teaches.â
A campus where both worlds fit
Bloomsburgâs nursing and ROTC programs have become mutually supportive partners in Ottâs life. Her schedule is a constant negotiation. Tuesday mornings in uniform, other mornings in scrubs, ROTC labs layered around clinicals. When she needs to miss physical training, ROTC understands. When she needs to wear her uniform on a clinical day, nursing faculty accommodate.
âIt can be stressful,â Ott said. âClinicals, classes, ROTC events. Itâs a lot. But thatâs whatâs taught me how to be organized, how to use every window of time effectively. I like the challenge.â
In the classroom, sheâs repeatedly drawn to the handsâon experiences Bloomsburgâs nursing program emphasizes inserting catheters, running multiple IV medications, assessing patients under supervision.
âThose skills translate directly to what I did in the Army last summer,â Ott said. âI was able to use what I learned here and apply it in realâtime. That connection is powerful.â
Ott will graduate in December 2026 and commission as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. Her goal is to serve in a brigade combat team or, eventually, become a flight nurse on a medevac helicopter.
As a nurse, sheâll start in a medicalâsurgical unit, as all new Army nurses do, but the duty station she ends up in depends on her ranking compared with other nurse cadets.
âMy ranking will come out next fall,â Ott said. âIâm not competing for a branch. Iâm competing for where Iâll go. I want to be somewhere that challenges me, where I can push my skills and grow.â
Ott says ROTC hasnât just opened a door to the military, itâs reshaped how she sees herself as a nurse.
âWe think of nurses as caregivers, which we are,â Ott said. âBut weâre also leaders. We manage patients, staff, and emergencies. ROTC has taught me how to lead with confidence and empathy. Thatâs what I want to bring into every room I enter.â