Military School Names New Chief
Posted: January 28, 2013
WOODSTOCK — Massanutten Military Academy has named Commander Keith I. Shockley, U.S. Navy, (Ret.) as the school’s new commandant of cadets.
The academy, located in Woodstock, is a private co-ed military boarding and day school for students in grades 7-12.
Shockley is currently working as a senior strategic planner with a contractor for a specialized U.S. Army unit in the Middle East. He will report to the academy on March 25, according to a statement from the school.
Shockley received his bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Hawaii and completed his master’s in human resource management and organization development at Webster University in St. Louis.
During his more than 30 years in the Navy, he held positions as executive officer and commanding officer.
He spent the last four years of his naval career in Norfolk as a branch head and then as the deputy director of Naval Education Training Command, where he evaluated, revised, and managed “curriculum oversight” of 15 learning centers and more than 33,400 students annually.
His professional accomplishments include extensive experience in strategic planning, executive leadership, team building and problem solving as well as financial program management.
— Staff Reports
The academy, located in Woodstock, is a private co-ed military boarding and day school for students in grades 7-12.
Shockley is currently working as a senior strategic planner with a contractor for a specialized U.S. Army unit in the Middle East. He will report to the academy on March 25, according to a statement from the school.
Shockley received his bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Hawaii and completed his master’s in human resource management and organization development at Webster University in St. Louis.
During his more than 30 years in the Navy, he held positions as executive officer and commanding officer.
He spent the last four years of his naval career in Norfolk as a branch head and then as the deputy director of Naval Education Training Command, where he evaluated, revised, and managed “curriculum oversight” of 15 learning centers and more than 33,400 students annually.
His professional accomplishments include extensive experience in strategic planning, executive leadership, team building and problem solving as well as financial program management.
— Staff Reports