NAVY RESERVE FUNDAMENTALS COURSE
(NAVRESFOR-NRF-3.0)
230 Advanced Practice MCQs — Comprehensive Exam Preparation
1. Which statutory authority establishes the legal framework for the organization and
administration of the Navy Reserve Force?
A) Executive Order 12333
B) Title 10, United States Code, Sections 10101–10506 (correct answer)
C) Title 32, United States Code
D) The National Security Act of 1947 exclusively
Rationale: Title 10 USC governs the organization, administration, and operations of the armed
forces including the Navy Reserve. Sections 10101–10506 specifically address the Reserve
Components, establishing their legal basis, composition, purposes, and the authority under which
they operate. Title 32 primarily governs the National Guard.
2. What is the PRIMARY mission of the Navy Reserve as defined by current Navy Reserve
Force policy?
A) To provide a strategic reserve force exclusively for wartime mobilization
B) To provide strategic depth and deliver operational capabilities to the Navy and Marine
Corps team across the full range of military operations (correct answer)
C) To train personnel exclusively for transition to active duty
D) To maintain equipment readiness for potential future conflicts only
Rationale: The Navy Reserve's primary mission is to provide strategic depth and operational
capabilities — not merely serving as a wartime backup force. Reserve Sailors serve as an
operational force contributing to current missions, exercises, and deployments while maintaining
readiness for full mobilization when needed.
3. What does the term "Selected Reserve" (SELRES) encompass under Title 10 USC?
A) Only drilling reservists in paid drill status
, B) Members of Ready Reserve units, individual mobilization augmentees (IMAs), and
Active Guard Reserve (AGR) personnel who are subject to mobilization within 24 hours
(correct answer)
C) Only active duty personnel attached to reserve units
D) Personnel on the Standby Reserve list only
Rationale: The Selected Reserve (SELRES) is the highest priority component of the Ready
Reserve, consisting of unit members (drilling reservists), Individual Mobilization Augmentees
(IMAs), and Active Guard Reserve (AGR) personnel. SELRES members are subject to
involuntary mobilization within 24 hours under Presidential authority.
4. Under what legal authority can the President order members of the Ready Reserve to active
duty for up to 365 days without a declaration of war or national emergency?
A) Title 10 USC Section 12301(a)
B) Title 10 USC Section 12302
C) Title 10 USC Section 12304 (correct answer)
D) Title 10 USC Section 12301(b)
Rationale: Title 10 USC Section 12304 (Presidential Reserve Call-Up, or PRC authority)
authorizes the President to order up to 200,000 members of the Ready Reserve (no more than
30,000 from the Selected Reserve) to active duty for up to 365 days without a declaration of war,
for operational missions requiring augmentation.
5. What is the distinction between "mobilization" and "activation" in Navy Reserve terminology?
A) They are identical terms used interchangeably
B) Mobilization is the process of assembling and organizing national resources for war;
activation specifically refers to the administrative and operational actions to bring a
Reserve unit or individual to active duty status (correct answer)
C) Activation is only for individual Sailors; mobilization only for units
D) Mobilization requires Congressional approval; activation does not
Rationale: Mobilization is the broad national process of assembling resources for conflict.
Activation is the specific administrative process by which individual Reservists or units are
ordered to active duty. Understanding this distinction is important for proper administrative
processing and Sailor communication during Reserve component operations.
6. What are the five categories of mobilization in ascending order of magnitude?
, A) Alert, Standby, Partial, Full, Total
B) Selective, Presidential Reserve Call-Up (PRC), Partial, Full, Total (correct answer)
C) Individual, Unit, Regional, National, Global
D) Advisory, Contingency, Emergency, War, Maximum
Rationale: The five mobilization categories in ascending order are: Selective (individual/unit
augmentation), Presidential Reserve Call-Up (PRC, Section 12304), Partial Mobilization
(Section 12302, up to 1,000,000), Full Mobilization (all Reserve Component units/personnel),
and Total Mobilization (all national resources). Each represents increasing commitment of
national reserve assets.
7. What is an "Individual Mobilization Augmentee" (IMA) and how does their role differ from a
traditional drilling reservist?
A) IMAs are inactive reservists with no training requirements
B) IMAs are Selected Reserve members assigned to specific active duty billets to
augment active component commands upon mobilization — they train with their
assigned command rather than a Reserve unit, and are designed to fill specific active duty
requirements upon activation (correct answer)
C) IMAs serve in a full-time capacity identical to AGR personnel
D) IMAs are only assigned to joint commands, never naval commands
Rationale: IMAs are SELRES members pre-assigned to specific active duty billets. Unlike
drilling unit members who train together as a unit, IMAs train individually with their gaining
command (typically 12–24 days annually). Upon mobilization, they immediately augment the
specific active duty position they were assigned, providing seamless integration without a
transition period.
8. What is the "Ready Reserve" and how is it structured?
A) Only personnel available for immediate deployment
B) The Ready Reserve consists of three categories: Selected Reserve (SELRES),
Individual Ready Reserve (IRR), and Inactive National Guard (ING) — it constitutes the
first source of personnel for mobilization (correct answer)
C) Only active drilling reserve units
D) Personnel who have completed active duty within the past 5 years
Rationale: The Ready Reserve (Title 10 USC Section 10142) is the primary mobilization pool
consisting of: Selected Reserve (highest priority — drilling units, IMAs, AGRs), Individual
Ready Reserve (non-drilling, subject to mobilization), and Inactive National Guard. Collectively,
the Ready Reserve provides approximately 1.5 million personnel available for mobilization in
varying timeframes.
, 9. What is the "Standby Reserve" and under what circumstances is it accessed?
A) Personnel on administrative leave status
B) Title 10 USC reserve personnel who are not in the Ready Reserve — divided into
Active Status (maintain skills, may be recalled for national emergency or war) and
Inactive Status (not actively serving, not mobilizable without extended process) (correct
answer)
C) The Standby Reserve is a component of the Selected Reserve
D) Personnel assigned to theater reserve units
Rationale: The Standby Reserve contains personnel with valid reasons for not serving in the
Ready Reserve (family hardship, critical civilian employment). The Active Status Standby
Reserve can be ordered to active duty during war or national emergency declared by Congress.
The Inactive Status is not generally accessible for mobilization.
10. What does "ACDUTRA" stand for, and what is its significance for Reserve Sailors?
A) Active Civilian Duty Training Assignment — a civilian skills program
B) Active Duty for Training — periods when Reservists perform required training in an
active duty status, accruing active duty benefits and protections including SCRA, SGLI,
and TRICARE activation (correct answer)
C) Active Component Duty Transfer Authorization — a personnel assignment program
D) Annual Contingency Duty Training Requirement — a training mandate
Rationale: ACDUTRA (Active Duty for Training) is a formal active duty status that activates
federal protections for Reserve Sailors, including Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
protections, SGLI life insurance coverage, TRICARE healthcare eligibility, and other active duty
benefits. Understanding ACDUTRA is essential for Sailors to know their rights and benefits
during training periods.
11. What is the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) and what key protections does it
provide to mobilized Reserve Sailors?
A) A pay supplement for deployed Reservists only
B) Federal law providing legal and financial protections including: interest rate cap of 6%
on pre-service debts, protection from eviction during military service, stays of civil
judicial proceedings, protection from default judgments, and lease termination rights
(correct answer)
C) A law governing Reserve retirement benefits only
D) An act providing healthcare benefits for Reserve families
(NAVRESFOR-NRF-3.0)
230 Advanced Practice MCQs — Comprehensive Exam Preparation
1. Which statutory authority establishes the legal framework for the organization and
administration of the Navy Reserve Force?
A) Executive Order 12333
B) Title 10, United States Code, Sections 10101–10506 (correct answer)
C) Title 32, United States Code
D) The National Security Act of 1947 exclusively
Rationale: Title 10 USC governs the organization, administration, and operations of the armed
forces including the Navy Reserve. Sections 10101–10506 specifically address the Reserve
Components, establishing their legal basis, composition, purposes, and the authority under which
they operate. Title 32 primarily governs the National Guard.
2. What is the PRIMARY mission of the Navy Reserve as defined by current Navy Reserve
Force policy?
A) To provide a strategic reserve force exclusively for wartime mobilization
B) To provide strategic depth and deliver operational capabilities to the Navy and Marine
Corps team across the full range of military operations (correct answer)
C) To train personnel exclusively for transition to active duty
D) To maintain equipment readiness for potential future conflicts only
Rationale: The Navy Reserve's primary mission is to provide strategic depth and operational
capabilities — not merely serving as a wartime backup force. Reserve Sailors serve as an
operational force contributing to current missions, exercises, and deployments while maintaining
readiness for full mobilization when needed.
3. What does the term "Selected Reserve" (SELRES) encompass under Title 10 USC?
A) Only drilling reservists in paid drill status
, B) Members of Ready Reserve units, individual mobilization augmentees (IMAs), and
Active Guard Reserve (AGR) personnel who are subject to mobilization within 24 hours
(correct answer)
C) Only active duty personnel attached to reserve units
D) Personnel on the Standby Reserve list only
Rationale: The Selected Reserve (SELRES) is the highest priority component of the Ready
Reserve, consisting of unit members (drilling reservists), Individual Mobilization Augmentees
(IMAs), and Active Guard Reserve (AGR) personnel. SELRES members are subject to
involuntary mobilization within 24 hours under Presidential authority.
4. Under what legal authority can the President order members of the Ready Reserve to active
duty for up to 365 days without a declaration of war or national emergency?
A) Title 10 USC Section 12301(a)
B) Title 10 USC Section 12302
C) Title 10 USC Section 12304 (correct answer)
D) Title 10 USC Section 12301(b)
Rationale: Title 10 USC Section 12304 (Presidential Reserve Call-Up, or PRC authority)
authorizes the President to order up to 200,000 members of the Ready Reserve (no more than
30,000 from the Selected Reserve) to active duty for up to 365 days without a declaration of war,
for operational missions requiring augmentation.
5. What is the distinction between "mobilization" and "activation" in Navy Reserve terminology?
A) They are identical terms used interchangeably
B) Mobilization is the process of assembling and organizing national resources for war;
activation specifically refers to the administrative and operational actions to bring a
Reserve unit or individual to active duty status (correct answer)
C) Activation is only for individual Sailors; mobilization only for units
D) Mobilization requires Congressional approval; activation does not
Rationale: Mobilization is the broad national process of assembling resources for conflict.
Activation is the specific administrative process by which individual Reservists or units are
ordered to active duty. Understanding this distinction is important for proper administrative
processing and Sailor communication during Reserve component operations.
6. What are the five categories of mobilization in ascending order of magnitude?
, A) Alert, Standby, Partial, Full, Total
B) Selective, Presidential Reserve Call-Up (PRC), Partial, Full, Total (correct answer)
C) Individual, Unit, Regional, National, Global
D) Advisory, Contingency, Emergency, War, Maximum
Rationale: The five mobilization categories in ascending order are: Selective (individual/unit
augmentation), Presidential Reserve Call-Up (PRC, Section 12304), Partial Mobilization
(Section 12302, up to 1,000,000), Full Mobilization (all Reserve Component units/personnel),
and Total Mobilization (all national resources). Each represents increasing commitment of
national reserve assets.
7. What is an "Individual Mobilization Augmentee" (IMA) and how does their role differ from a
traditional drilling reservist?
A) IMAs are inactive reservists with no training requirements
B) IMAs are Selected Reserve members assigned to specific active duty billets to
augment active component commands upon mobilization — they train with their
assigned command rather than a Reserve unit, and are designed to fill specific active duty
requirements upon activation (correct answer)
C) IMAs serve in a full-time capacity identical to AGR personnel
D) IMAs are only assigned to joint commands, never naval commands
Rationale: IMAs are SELRES members pre-assigned to specific active duty billets. Unlike
drilling unit members who train together as a unit, IMAs train individually with their gaining
command (typically 12–24 days annually). Upon mobilization, they immediately augment the
specific active duty position they were assigned, providing seamless integration without a
transition period.
8. What is the "Ready Reserve" and how is it structured?
A) Only personnel available for immediate deployment
B) The Ready Reserve consists of three categories: Selected Reserve (SELRES),
Individual Ready Reserve (IRR), and Inactive National Guard (ING) — it constitutes the
first source of personnel for mobilization (correct answer)
C) Only active drilling reserve units
D) Personnel who have completed active duty within the past 5 years
Rationale: The Ready Reserve (Title 10 USC Section 10142) is the primary mobilization pool
consisting of: Selected Reserve (highest priority — drilling units, IMAs, AGRs), Individual
Ready Reserve (non-drilling, subject to mobilization), and Inactive National Guard. Collectively,
the Ready Reserve provides approximately 1.5 million personnel available for mobilization in
varying timeframes.
, 9. What is the "Standby Reserve" and under what circumstances is it accessed?
A) Personnel on administrative leave status
B) Title 10 USC reserve personnel who are not in the Ready Reserve — divided into
Active Status (maintain skills, may be recalled for national emergency or war) and
Inactive Status (not actively serving, not mobilizable without extended process) (correct
answer)
C) The Standby Reserve is a component of the Selected Reserve
D) Personnel assigned to theater reserve units
Rationale: The Standby Reserve contains personnel with valid reasons for not serving in the
Ready Reserve (family hardship, critical civilian employment). The Active Status Standby
Reserve can be ordered to active duty during war or national emergency declared by Congress.
The Inactive Status is not generally accessible for mobilization.
10. What does "ACDUTRA" stand for, and what is its significance for Reserve Sailors?
A) Active Civilian Duty Training Assignment — a civilian skills program
B) Active Duty for Training — periods when Reservists perform required training in an
active duty status, accruing active duty benefits and protections including SCRA, SGLI,
and TRICARE activation (correct answer)
C) Active Component Duty Transfer Authorization — a personnel assignment program
D) Annual Contingency Duty Training Requirement — a training mandate
Rationale: ACDUTRA (Active Duty for Training) is a formal active duty status that activates
federal protections for Reserve Sailors, including Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
protections, SGLI life insurance coverage, TRICARE healthcare eligibility, and other active duty
benefits. Understanding ACDUTRA is essential for Sailors to know their rights and benefits
during training periods.
11. What is the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) and what key protections does it
provide to mobilized Reserve Sailors?
A) A pay supplement for deployed Reservists only
B) Federal law providing legal and financial protections including: interest rate cap of 6%
on pre-service debts, protection from eviction during military service, stays of civil
judicial proceedings, protection from default judgments, and lease termination rights
(correct answer)
C) A law governing Reserve retirement benefits only
D) An act providing healthcare benefits for Reserve families