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psycho joe
9th Jul 2010, 02:47
Firstly, I have no issue per-se with any flying training establishment & I'm sure that there are universities that are turning out a quality product, but this article would have to be the most poorly written, one sided load of rubbish ever produced by FSA; The likes of which is normally the domain of mainstream media.


Would you go to a dentist who had learned the art of pulling teeth by working in the outback or perhaps in Papua New Guinea? Professor
Patrick Murray doesn't think so...

Err...well YES Professor Patrick Murray, I bloody well would. Especially if it means that said dentist has experienced every kind of tooth problem first hand, as opposed to having read about it from the comfort of a first world capital city. And as a pilot who has flown in both I find the implication reprehensible.

The article goes on to make many more assertions about graduates being trained to airline standards, being considered "better pilots", and my favourite, that an aviation degree...will help particularly when going for command.... :yuk: (Bollocks)

An aviation degree is but one of several paths to a licence. The fact is that you can't be taught experience & virtually every Aviation Degree graduate goes to GA to learn their craft alongside their non degree brethren.

Be very, very wary of anyone involved in ab-initio training making assertions that they will train you to an "airline standard" ie. that you will walk from the flying school straight into the welcoming arms of an airline, or that honing ones craft in the "outback" or PNG is a bad thing or somehow redundant.


joe crazyhorse.

glenb
9th Jul 2010, 02:52
Dear Sir/Madam,



I am writing to express my feelings about the article on University Degrees in the latest Flight Safety Magazine. Firstly I would like to “declare my hand”. I own a medium sized flying school with 20 aircraft, 20 instructors and approximately 200 students. We have no affiliation with any University. I felt that your magazine has strayed away from safety related matters and more towards interest based journalism. After reading the article it would appear to me that a payment was made to CASA for this content, although there was no mention of it being an advertising feature. It was very one sided, and did not present the argument from “the other side of the fence”. As the purpose of this industry funded magazine is to promote safety, I could find no factual statistics indicating the increased contribution to safety of the University Trained Pilot. Your article will have a negligible effect on my business; however I was surprised to read such obvious marketing in a magazine that previously held credibility. I respectfully request the opportunity to present the other side of the argument containing some factual statistics. If indeed a payment was made then I am offering to equal that payment for an equal amount of space dedicated to industry based training. I am not indicating that I feel one approach to Flight Training is necessarily better than the other and I appreciate that they both have their merits. Perhaps such articles could be reserved for the traditional magazines and you could put your efforts and our money into serious contributions to flight safety. Very disappointing to see the downward spiral in the quality of this magazine continue.



Yours Sincerely



Glen Buckley

glenb
9th Jul 2010, 02:55
Dear Glen



Firstly, thank you for your email. It demonstrates that the magazine is doing its job when it promotes discussion about the best way to promote aviation safety.



There was no payment made to CASA for this content. As a general rule, we do not run advertorial, because we do not wish to compromise our editorial independence, but if we did, it would be very clearly branded as advertorial.



Training, and the quality of such training, ensuring that the pilots of the future are fit-for-task in a rapidly-changing aviation environment, is, we believe, a safety issue, and therefore an appropriate subject for Flight Safety. The article was simply the first of a series on training, and we will be looking at other options and training issues (such as glass cockpits/workload/English language) in coming articles.



To that end, we are more than happy to interview you/Melbourne Flight Training about your training philosophy/focus as part of that ongoing series.



Thank you again for your email - and your evident passion, which we share, for aviation safety,



Margo

runway16
9th Jul 2010, 03:01
The FSA article on having a degree via a Uni Flight Training program can only be viewed as one thing, a FREE ADVERTISMENT.

As for the opening preamble about an outback Dentist ........... what does that have to do with flight training?

The whole article (Free Advert) is totally geared to producing an airline driver.
There are other flying positions and requirements here in Australia in case Mr Murray had not noticed.

My experience with some so called Uni trained pilots is that they simply do not have a lot of experience and that shows in the air and on the ground.

As for the topic of degrees amd what they are taught at the Uni Flight School a lot of that is actually covered in the normal CASA flight training requirements.

The article leaves a lot to be desired. One sided, inaccurate and not real coverage of who foots the total bill for a Uni trained pilot.

Are we to only have pilots who are flying on Daddy's cheque book and no real concept of what a self-funded trainee is all about.
Give me the latter as a pilot anyday.

R16

j3pipercub
9th Jul 2010, 03:10
Awesome runway 16,

Just a few points,

My experience with some so called Uni trained pilots is that they simply do not have a lot of experience and that shows in the air and on the ground.

Because it's only the Uni trained guys right? The guys trained 'the ole fashuned way' never do that stuff...:rolleyes:

As for the topic of degrees amd what they are taught at the Uni Flight School a lot of that is actually covered in the normal CASA flight training requirements.

In order to make that assertion, you would have to have attended and completed the very degree programs that you appear to be denigrating.

The article leaves a lot to be desired. One sided, inaccurate and not real coverage of who foots the total bill for a Uni trained pilot.

Are we to only have pilots who are flying on Daddy's cheque book and no real concept of what a self-funded trainee is all about.
Give me the latter as a pilot anyday.

Wow, just WOW! So anyone who did a degree and flying must have had their parents pay for their flying? Do you normally specialize in gross, inaccurate and stupid generalisations?

GLEN,

At least they replied. I would take them up on the offer to be interviewed and tell your side of the story.

j3

RENURPP
9th Jul 2010, 04:26
glenb,

Maybe you should take FSA up on their offer of being interviewed and start with the scenario of a garbage collector teaching medicine at university, surely that is a parallel to the good professor pretending to be able to comment on the aviation training industry.

What would some self appointed know it all with a degree in who knows what, really know about pilots experience in the bush v the class room?
I live in the NT and I get sick and tired of these accademics who after having read a book about our indigenous population believe they have all the answers and simply come up here and screw the place up, now they are influencing aviation, god help us.

The deciding factor as far as I am concerned is the individuals passion for the job, that will determine the amount of effort put in, their ability to learn and one of the major factors, who teaches them.

psycho joe
9th Jul 2010, 04:49
The professor seems to have the commonly held view that PNG flying is a place of last resort - the place you go when you can't get work anywhere else.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

Joker 10
9th Jul 2010, 05:04
University study and the award of Degrees is about academic endeavor and in all cases of technologic/science courses there is a post Degree Award period of "indenture" practical leading up to the final ability to practise one's craft.

This is true for Medicine, dentistry, all forms of Engineering, Law,Chemistry and so on.

To expect any new graduate to be competent in the manipulative skills be it flying an aircraft or pulling teeth is a big ask.

The real difference a University Graduate should have is the discipline of learning and the ability to objectively question in a balanced way so that real rigour is used in the decision making process.

long term the Graduate will be better equipped to continuously adapt to life long learning.

RENURPP
9th Jul 2010, 05:14
Joker,

Thats all fine in theory, however it doesn't seem to translate into reality in the real world, or at least not the world I see every day.

I guess it boils down to - you don't learn everthing from books.

j3pipercub
9th Jul 2010, 05:45
RENURPP,

You certainly seem to be acting your age (8). You also seem to hate Universities going by these comments:

good professor pretending to be able to comment on the aviation training industry.

I think you'll find he can comment.

What would some self appointed know it all with a degree in who knows what, really know about pilots experience in the bush v the class room?

I live in the NT and I get sick and tired of these accademics who after having read a book about our indigenous population believe they have all the answers and simply come up here and screw the place up, now they are influencing aviation, god help us.

It's 'academic' by the way. I do agree with your statement about Indigenous Australians, but that once again has nothing to do with aviation.

I guess it boils down to - you don't learn everthing from books.

Must've been hard learning all that CPL theory by rote.

And just for the record, all of you who seem to think this Professor is not qualified to comment about the industry are either showing gross ignorance or are talking out your behinds.

Ex Cathay 747 checkie, CASA Delegate and ATO, one of the founding members of LOSA, current/former committee member of GAPAN, RAPAC. In addition to this, also formerly a senior executive of CASA. There is also quite a bit I have missed.

But maybe you guys a right, he wouldn't know a thing about the industry would he?

j3

psycho joe
9th Jul 2010, 05:51
This thread wasn't intended to be about uni bashing nor about the merits thereof.

It is however entirely inappropriate for an industry regulator to be showing preference to an individual business or training stream, assuming that all training companies follow the regulators syllabus. Some rather silly (IMO) claims were made in the article. By printing these claims without verification or contradiction from a variety of sources, CASA has by omission presented these claims as fact.

At the very least FSA should have interviewed some non uni flying school operators as well as airline recruiters. If not some "outback" & PNG operators.

I would suggest that airline recruitment would be less about where an applicant trained & more about experience, trainability, & personality befitting the existing workplace culture etc.

j3pipercub
9th Jul 2010, 05:56
psycho,

If you read the response that Glen received from the editor, it is an ongoing series. I think it would be fantastic to hear from the different types of training. It may seem like a paid presentation so to speak, the credibility lies in the next few FS magazines. If they do indeed continue the series with the same amount of pages, then there is the integrity.

j3

mcgrath50
9th Jul 2010, 05:57
Having trained both in a university and 'club' flying school, the difference between the two (airline standard flying training) is really very minor and is a bit of a glitzy word. At the end of the day, I got great and average training at both, the difference being the quality of the instructor and our interaction.

At the end of the day, it's the instructor who makes the most difference in my opinion and I have been lucky enough to have some great ones!

psycho joe
9th Jul 2010, 06:09
j3 nothing in the article about a series.

Editors response sounds like placating white noise.

Horatio Leafblower
9th Jul 2010, 06:48
$10 says that Psycho Joe and Renurpp don't have a degree in anything.

b_sta
9th Jul 2010, 07:11
$10 says that Psycho Joe and Renurpp don't have a degree in anything.

Well, you certainly never hear the degree-holders bashing the usefulness of a degree or the merits of university, do you? Funny, that.

chimbu warrior
9th Jul 2010, 07:18
Well from where I sit, Psycho Joe has got the right attitude, and I'd be happy to fly with him/her any day. Thanks also for pointing out the commonly held misconception that all PNG pilots are desperados. They certainly are not.

I applaud glenb for taking the time to write to CASA regarding this heavily biased article. As is obvious by their reply, some in the office of the regulator have no idea what happens out in the real world. If this is a "serious safety issue", then they have completely lost the plot.

As has previously been stated, this thread, and gleb's letter to CASA is not about the merits of degree programs; it is about the appropriateness of CASA publishing an article that lacks balance, and has no relevance to flight safety.

Capt Claret
9th Jul 2010, 08:07
I have no degree, and know nothing of the article that fostered this thread.

Part of my employment contract when I first started instructing at the Space Base in Cessnock in '86 was to read and be examined on a book about flight instruction.

The book's name has long been forgotten but it was written by a couple of academics from Newcastle University, who were associated with Jim Spark. The basic premise of the book was that to be an effective instructor, one had to be able to communicate, in a common language with the student.

Given that the book had a significant emphasis on communication, I was some what nonplussed when in the final chapter I had to get a dictionary out, to determine what a word starting in X meant.

In the end, I figured that the authors had completely missed their own message, when they used a high-faluting word starting with X, instead of HAND.

Arm out the window
9th Jul 2010, 08:22
also formerly a senior executive of CASA

What a coincidence - his organisation gets a write-up in a magazine that's distributed to every Aussie pilot. Not bad free advertising if you can get it!

Still, it should hopefully be transparently obvious to any slightly informed reader that learning about flying in the unforgiving PNG environment is something to be respected, rather than clumsily denigrated as per the pissweak sub-headline quoted above.

Captain Nomad
9th Jul 2010, 08:47
"A school leaver who wants to be a pilot is around 18 years of age, and while there are some mature 18 year olds, maturity tends to come with time. One way of doing that at the moment is to give someone a commercial pilot's license and get them to go out and mature in an environment such as PNG or the bush. Alternatively you can mature them in a more controlled environment. One of those has traditionally been the military, who do it extremely well - university is becoming another pathway."

Really?! From my observations, uni life is traditionally way more about doing as much socialisation as possible and minimal work. Calculating how many questions you can get wrong in order to 'pass.' Figuring out who got the most drunk on the weekend and waltzing from one party to the next while trying to get as many chicks as possible. Really good maturing going on there!

Not suggesting that all uni students are useless party animals who don't work hard mind you. But to suggest that it is somehow superior to 'real life' and real world experience is going to take some real work to convince me.

Oh, and by the way, you won't find any 18 year old, fresh out of flight school kids in PNG... :=

GoodbyeGA
9th Jul 2010, 09:09
Really?! From my observations, uni life is traditionally way more about doing as much socialisation as possible and minimal work. Calculating how many questions you can get wrong in order to 'pass.' Figuring out who got the most drunk on the weekend and waltzing from one party to the next while trying to get as many chicks as possible. Really good maturing going on there!

Yes, that is the life I lived when doing an aviation degree. IMHO the majority of content taught in an aviation degree can be learnt straight from the recommended textbooks, part of the reason i attended 20% of my lectures yet still achieved a 84% GPA. :}

newagebird
9th Jul 2010, 09:20
I have gone through the degree path and i have to agree with you gentlemen. The degree path only has a way of opening up the many different aspects of aviation, including the laws and regulations, structures and aircraft design. Theres no reason why a student at any other school cannot learn from the vast resources available to them.
Degree programs tend to spoon feed students but i as an instructor always tell them to look beyond all the marketing and the corporate statements that are made to lure them towards airline training. Its important for them to realise there is a different world out there too.

My point is that both paths are equally good in the experience they provide. A 150 hour pilot is a 150 hour pilot. It only matters what little things he has been taught by a good instructor, not what the overall program tends to teach ("Airline training"). You can set out SOPs and what not but what a student really needs is some quality one on one time with someone whos more interested in giving that guy/girl the best chance at someday becoming a proficient pilot. Unfortunately as more students want degrees, management prefers to cram them in to over crowded courses. That is when the problems start.

my 2 cents, newagebird

psycho joe
9th Jul 2010, 09:27
$10 says that Psycho Joe and Renurpp don't have a degree in anything.

Only ten bucks? I'm mortally offended, where's your sense of conviction man. :ok:

I'll raise you your ten bucks & bet the Liberian deficit that Horatio Leafblower is a frustrated investment banker.

Either that or he wishes that he was an airline pilot so that he could validate those fealings of superiority over those of us who are.

So why do you hate your mother?....:8

Cessna 180
9th Jul 2010, 10:34
There seems to be a school of thought among many (not all) uni graduates in all fields that if you don't have a degree you are not quite up there with the rest of them.

I have managed to self study CPL and IREX and had two separate succesfull careers after leaving school at Y10.

My training was completed at a 'lowly' country aeroclub, where ego's were few and fun & proffesionalism were the priorities.

I dont recall any GA company I have worked with asking anything about my training.

They were however interested how well I would get along with the average passenger and whether I can show good airmanship and fly the aircraft in a smooth and safe manner to commercial considerations.

After you finish training and begin 'learning' in the real world, it is up to the individual how well they perform and has little do with to whom they paid there training fees.

I agree that article was complete propoganda and a waste of taxpayers money

Baldnfat
9th Jul 2010, 11:35
:ok::ok:'s up C180

biton
9th Jul 2010, 23:53
Sorry j3, but if it looks like an advertisement and it smells like an advertisement........ well, you know the rest. That reply from the editor was nothing more than the worst case of backpedaling I've ever seen. Where did it suggest in the article that this would be a series of articles, thereby allaying our suspicions?

This Professor could be the former commander of the space shuttle for all I care, however his obvious attempt to belittle general aviation as a viable route to the airlines helps him to read like a subjective git.

I agree that there are many cliches about bush pilots being better aviators that are simply false and having taken the "bush pilot" route myself I'm forced to sometimes cringe at the things I read on here but let's face it, this article was quite obviously not without agenda.

I love that the editor believes that CASA has met its objective by promoting debate about safety, when all they've really done is encourage argument about bias in journalism.

Horatio Leafblower
10th Jul 2010, 01:24
I'll raise you your ten bucks & bet the Liberian deficit that Horatio Leafblower is a frustrated investment banker.

Either that or he wishes that he was an airline pilot so that he could validate those fealings of superiority over those of us who are.

Hope no-one takes you up on that wager ol buddy.

My statement - and more particularly, your response - merely illustrate that the people you find most loudly decrying degree-holding pilots are usually not degree holders themselves and not fully qualified to comment on the usefulness, or otherwise, of a degree over the life span of its holder.

As for feelings of superiority... :rolleyes:

I don't feel superior to any person, except those that dress their prejudice up with excuses and call it "considered opinion".

Capt Claret A/Prof Ross Telfer is the name you seek - he also wrote an excellent book on how to sail small boats. He was better with small boats. :{

psycho joe
10th Jul 2010, 03:01
When have I decried tertiary education?

I do however believe that my, & for that matter your (non aviation) tertiary qualifications are irrelevant here so I've never posted them.

On the other hand you like to make it clear to the world that you are smarter than everyone else. You use tertiary qualifications as a point of defence. Your qualifications & background are largely non aviation which makes it all the more important for you to tell everyone how smart you are. This way people will understand that whilst you are not an airline pilot you could have been, & if you were you'd be better than the rest because you are you. And you're compulsively always right. Much to the quiet annoyance to all around you.

You have no argument here.

You have no point here.

The more that you argue about nothing on a public forum, the more you appear like a drunk screaming at a lamp post. The drunk will win his argument but the public will be served a spectacle.

Monopole
10th Jul 2010, 03:13
Like most here I have many friends in the industry who hold degrees. I do not.

Without exception, all my friends with Aviation degrees have not done any better then me or faster then me in our career advancement. We all went through training schools, Instructing, Charter (singles, pistion twins and turbines, both single pilot and multi crew) and now a combintaion of little jets and big jets (depending on lifes choices) all at the same relative pace.

Those of my firends that had non aviation degrees (IT, Management and Law) shot through the ranks at an amazing rate.

If the good Prof. holds the creds mentioned earlier, then he should flamin well know better.

psycho joe
10th Jul 2010, 06:20
I don't feel superior to any person, except those that dress their prejudice up with excuses and call it "considered opinion".


Same here. Especially when a learned professor tries to claim that my years in PNG were based on "experimental learning" & not on extensive company training & sop's. Perhaps you know better. I'm always happy to be corrected.

Ted D Bear
10th Jul 2010, 07:07
I dunno why but we seem to live in a country where everything is Cert III this Cert IV that or degree in whatever.

I have no problem if a well-trained pilot got that training through a degree program. Personally, I've never really understood why a degree program was put together - other than universities finding new ways to enrol more students, especially from overseas.

Isn't the point here that the FSA article was apparently one-sided? I didn't read it - but, then again, I don't read anything in that trashy-mag anymore. :mad:

Ted

BTW - I don't have any aviation degrees; but I've got a couple of non-aviation ones. So I don't think I have a bias either way.

Horatio Leafblower
10th Jul 2010, 08:54
you like to make it clear to the world that you are smarter than everyone else.

Sorry I make you feel so insecure, Joe. Good luck with the therapy :ooh:

Dangly Bits
10th Jul 2010, 09:25
Somehow I get the feeling that the writer Paul Wilson has as much Aviation background as the Editor! Zip....
DB

A37575
10th Jul 2010, 14:55
[QUOTE]
There was no payment made to CASA for this content.[/QUO

In the past, FSA often commissioned an article to be published in the magazine and pay the author depending upon the number of words. Maybe this was a case in question?

Aerodynamisist
11th Jul 2010, 03:17
Not worth getting up set about it, unless you own a flying school not affiliated with a university.

I couldn't afford to move 600k's to the city from country NSW, support myself through uni for 3 years and learn to fly. It had to be one or the other so I went to a country school and learnt to fly.

I'm jealous of those that did get the opportunity and I have worked with a few all fine aviators, the only comment I could make was that some did not come out with many quals, I flew jumpers with one degree guy who came out of a 3 year degree with a bare cpl and an instructor rating - no ifr and no atpl subjects ! so wtf did he do for 3 years ? I expect this has been rectified since - it was some time ago.

kalavo
11th Jul 2010, 04:12
Aviation degrees are as useless as tits on a bull.

Those who do degrees in other fields do pick up some useful skill sets and definitely have an advantage, but those who do an Aviation degree barely even seem to get a skill set they need long term - ATPL subjects, instrument and/or instructor rating - little lone something that makes them stand out from the crowd.

More than a few I've met seem to think everything should be handed to them on a plate and unwilling to put in the effort required outside driving a plane (passenger check in, clean the plane afterwards, etc.) It really just appears to be another rebadged zero to hero course.

There are some excellent pilots with Aviation degrees, but the degree did not change their attitude or drive.. they would be the same excellent pilots they are owing to their own motivation and attitude, not a bit of paper they spent three years obtaining. They get the job done, put in the effort to keep themselves current for renewals and progress through the system because they put in the effort. But there are just as many (if not more) excellent pilots without an Aviation degree who manage the same thing.

patienceboy
11th Jul 2010, 06:39
I have heard of people who held an aviation degree but still hadn’t passed their CASA ATPL exams since the CASA pass mark was higher than the uni pass mark.:confused:

Nothing against degrees, they are certainly not a bad thing, but where is the evidence to prove that degree qualified pilots are any better? I would be very interested to see a proper non-biased study of long term airline sim and line check performance (which naturally includes CRM etc) versus academic qualifications (note that degree status is not an indicator of intelligence).

I will hypothesise now that there would be no correlation. It really does just come down to the individual. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to find people with a practical trade background coming out on top.

4Greens
11th Jul 2010, 06:50
Check out UNSW. A good education for future pilot managers.

LeadSled
11th Jul 2010, 07:30
Folks,
The one thing the "Professor" does not have is any significant GA experience, and in my opinion, has the usual disdain, bordering on contempt for GA, indeed any non-military trained pilot, that is common amongst ex-RAF ( note: RAF, not necessarily true of RAAF) officers.

It comes across in this article.

Having said that, one of the shortcomings of most club/school based training is that the ground component is limited to "how to pass the exams", with little in-depth study beyond the bare minimum to pass, unless the student is a self starter who wants to dig deeper.

In contrast, most Uni. type courses cover a somewhat broader field than the bare CASA syllabus, as do some but not all airline cadet schemes.

Does it make a difference in the long run??? That is a question to which the only answer is: It depends on the individual.

Tootle pip!!

Ando1Bar
11th Jul 2010, 08:10
As a following up to the previous post...I might be wrong, but doesn't 'the professor' fly RAA out of Heck Field?

poteroo
11th Jul 2010, 09:51
Is there an industry where the starting qualifications have not increased? Seems to me that the academic 'bar' is being continuously lifted. I think the primary reason is because it helps to create a wider range of qualifications, and in many ways allows the really industrious members of our community to rise up the academic hierachy in their field. Whether they are the most suitable persons for a particular position, outside of academia, is arguable.

I digress a little. In agricultural science - a PhD is the basic qual for most R&D positions, and it's because there are now enough people with them to allow selection. I see people in Canberra doing quite menial work, but for which a first degree was the level. It's been jokingly said that the now mythical tea lady would need a tertiary qual in CBR!

Why has this happened? My view is that it has everything to do with the huge numbers of students that Universities need to push through in order to qualify for funding and grants. Every PhD student is worth lots,(on completion), to a faculty...hence the drive to churn out more and more very well qualified people. Except for a very small number, most/many of these well qualified people spend their professional lives in boring jobs - because they're overqualified for the positions. This leads to job-hopping at the earliest possible - so the system is really self-defeating from an employers' viewpoint. But, it seems to have become entrenched.

I can see the same thing happening in aviation. The 1st filter in the selection process might eventually be +/- tertiary qual - not because it's essential to the job - but because it's possible. Next step it will be an MBA in 'aviation studies', and after that - a PhD could be possible. All new filters in the employment pipeline.

happy days,

MyNameIsIs
11th Jul 2010, 10:34
I'd rather fly with a general dumbarse who knows the rule and regs, has noticably good flying skills and demonstrates a sound command judgement when in control of an aircraft rather than some diploma-waving person who can't fly for sh!t.

You'll get people who can and cannot fly well whether they have done the "bush" road or the "uni" road. It is the individual to a large extent- the best teacher won't be able to educate someone who doesn't particularly want to learn!

But to categorically state that a "uni" taught pilot will be better just because they did the diploma/degree/whatever, then that is simply wrong. Vice versa.


Me, non-uni. But i thought about it, decided it wasnt for me (I just wanted to go and fly ASAP!)

spirax
11th Jul 2010, 11:21
The day the Uni's work out how to teach "experience" then I might accept that as a qualification. In the meantime, prospective pilots should try and undertake their training at schools that are known for the standard of their product. (Not that many of them about these days I'm afraid!) Then go bush for a bit and get that "experience". A degree might be nice on the CV but means zip for the first decade or so of being in the "trade".

Deaf
11th Jul 2010, 11:50
It started way back even before the Dawkins era of nearly 25 years ago

Worthless parasites who were members of the right group needed employment with a nice title and nice wage so the idea came in (actually this had been pushed for years before) where a "degree" was important for everything even pulling a beer

Canberra is the physical and emotional center of this group of s**t

FSA was their first score with aviation where they turned ASD into something that is not even useful for toilet paper and they are using FSA to bring forward the idea that they have some value as people (rather than being only useful if put in a pet food can) by encouraging their mates in the "education industry" in the hope of becoming a "professor", "senior lecturer", "consultant" etc etc

Back in the days when matric physics was equivalent to 2nd year uni physics today someone with a degree in hard science would expect to pass all 5 CPL exams with a couple of weeks self study. No need for a "professor of aviation studies"

Wally Mk2
11th Jul 2010, 12:04
I think it's pretty widely accepted that you don't need a degree to fly a plane (in fact it's bloody obvious!!) but you need it to get the job these days sadly!

Somebody believes that having a higher education is what life is all about. Well those pilots who came back from the war to fly our at the time modern airliners sure didn't have the same level of so called higher education as today but they had the skill to make this country what it is today without the silly bit of paper. To those now doing the hiring we built aviation in this fantastic country of ours on raw skill & guts, lets not forget that in even modern times (where it's meant to be easier & safer to pilot a plane) some peckerwood (as mentioned in "The Right Stuff") has gotta take it up & some peckerwood has gotta land it!:ok:.


Wmk2

arnellis
11th Jul 2010, 12:13
I am pretty sure you can do a masters in aviation management after you have 4 years industry experience, and that would make your 4 years up north equal to a bachelors degree in the uni's eyes.
I do not know the specifics of it, but I have come across someone who is doing it this way, by correspondence while they are working.

xxgoldxx
11th Jul 2010, 12:20
if a yr 10 dropout can go on to self study all subjects from CPL to ATPL and hold down a full time flying job gaining real experience in the meantime then you "gotta" wonder what the difference is that all those dollars go towards....

Wally Mk2
11th Jul 2010, 12:25
"xxgxx" you bin peeking in my old school bag:ok: How did ya know?:E


Wmk2

sparcap
11th Jul 2010, 15:46
The article is clearly biased as many have elaborated upon. Stereotypical intolerance and insecurity seem to pervade the many balanced responses thus far.

I don’t believe a degree influences employers to any significant extent (nor should it).

To those who doubt the validity and relevance of the true technical degree’s, does one also value a number in a logbook as opposed to the journey travelled to accomplish it? The same applies to those who set out upon a degree simply to accomplish a piece of paper. The true lasting result, regardless of the path chosen, is the attitude and knowledge, gained through true understanding. Either way, it comes down the resolve and attitude of the individual, what one makes of the opportunities presented.

Largely I believe it comes down to one’s situation, background and goals. Personally I come from a background of no connection to Aviation, however I could imagine working in no other industry, simply in the blood so to speak. If I was to loose the privilege of working as a pilot, a career as a maintenance or design engineer would be in my sights, failing that, operations etc etc. Given this, I chose to complete a technically oriented degree and frankly would do the same over again. Someone from a different background or goal set may choose alternatively.

Neither can be stereotyped or isolated and compared generically.

The one overriding influence I took away from my degree is that I understand a small amount about the many facets of the juggernaut that is Aviation, yet not much about any of them. To assume otherwise is an arrogant and ignorant stance, unfortunately adopted far to often by fellow pilots.

Tolerance and respect are virtues of fleeting, Aviation is a lifelong learning process, and to forget or believe otherwise is none other than dangerous.

How dare you disassociate a degree with self-funded students, simply ignorance at it's best.

j3pipercub
12th Jul 2010, 01:45
You don't look at Proon for a weekend and look what happens.

I don't think I have seen so much insecurity about a Tertiary education EVER. And this is from guys on here whose opinions I respected.

I do love the 'not all but most Uni trained pilots I've flown with' or the 'I'd rather fly with a dumbarse' comments. Cos I'm sure you've flown with a large cross section in order to make that statement right? :rolleyes:

And Wally, bringing war time pilots into the argument? How? Why? Huh? Does not compute.

Just Wow. Don't know whether to be shocked or disappointed really. Probably just disappointed. Maybe it's time I bowed out of here.

As for the FSA article, and whether or not it's a series, let's wait until next issue. If there is nothing, then sure, lynch the entire FSA team, they all have DEGREES!!!!! That seems to be the mood of this current crowd.

Captain Nomad
12th Jul 2010, 01:59
J3, before you get your tailwheel in a real twist. I agree that there has been some surprising over reaction, but I think what gets up people's nose is the attitude which clearly comes across in the article that any alternative to a degree (or the military) is a lot less valuable.

I have observed that aviation uni programs have always had to try and prove their value to industry. In other industries the degree is a given starting point but aviation in Australia is not so. The article is basically saying we should take the USA lead (once again) and make an aviation degree a starting pre-requisite to a pilot career. Trying to prove their worth but also denigrating other avenues in the process. Not showing a lot of the tolerance and respect that Sparcap is reminding everyone of. We all know how well us Aussies 'give' respect when it is 'demanded' of us...!

j3pipercub
12th Jul 2010, 02:22
Nomad,

The arguments of the article and the degree are two separate ones and yet once again this thread has gone down the degree bashing path.

I was happy to argue the merits of the article or otherwise, but the thread looks to have been steered in the direction that almost all of its predecessors have gone. No twisted tailwheel, just disappointed.

I do agree that sparcaps post is fantastic. I wish I could express myself as eloquently.

j3

biton
12th Jul 2010, 03:31
Think about where the advertising money for this magazine comes from and tell me it's ethical. page 28 and I find an ad for Griffith Uni. I think you'll find they and other uni's have been long standing advertising contributers to this 72 page piece of chequebook journalism. If I were one of these other training operators advertising in this mag I'd be asking for my money back.

Sorry j3, there was never going to be a series but I'll there will be now, just so they can regain some credibility. The media , ent and arts alliance code of conduct (which they may not be part of anyway) doesn't require a statement be put forth regarding it being part of a series but it's considered common bloody sense to do so, especially if writing such a one sided piece.

You may be upset, and rightfully so, but the reason people feel so passionately about this is because they believe the article denigrated their hard earned experience in ga.

Maybe we can resolve this by referring it to media watch?

Seriously though, I'm considering nominating Steve Creedy from the Aus for a Walkley after this magazine's effort!

j3pipercub
12th Jul 2010, 04:00
biton,

Sorry j3, there was never going to be a series but there will be now.

You say that with such certainty. Do you have an inside line to FSA? Not being sarcastic, but that is the second time you have made that assertion. Or do you have editorial experience?

You may be upset, and rightfully so, but the reason people feel so passionately about this is because they believe the article denigrated their hard earned experience in ga.

I am in GA, I also did a degree. So what does that make me, do I hate myself? Is it Captain Jekyll and Pile-it Hyde?

I do understand how people may feel their experience may be denigrated by this article. But to then turn around and bash the degree or the people who attend/have attended doesn't make sense. By that skewed logic, my rebuttal would be, "Well all you bushies and New Guinea guys are cowboys and couldn't hack Uni". I KNOW THAT ISN'T TRUE, and nothing could be further from reality in my opinion. However that is the type of argument being put forward by some on here.

But this seems to be a circular argument, I give up, I won't be participating in this thread anymore.

j3

biton
12th Jul 2010, 04:08
That's the thing j3, we'll never know because they never stated it upfront. Could have spared us from this whole thread. Think about it. I know a thing or two about the media industry from another life and let me tell you this kind of thing does happen, often! Be objective for a moment and consider the possibility. Also, you should consider popping a Valium.

4Greens
12th Jul 2010, 08:52
Most airlines in the world have pilot managers. It is important to the well being of the industry that these managers have experience and training in other areas than the actual flying of aircraft. Safety management, Human factors,Airline economics, route planning and basic tools such as statistical analysis come to mind. A good degree programme covers these essential areas and many more. This is where University education should and does score in recruitment.

On another issue, those universities that don't teach licence subjects as part of the degree, add academic rigour and extra value to the process. Look for those.

(Posted by a non degree holder)

A37575
12th Jul 2010, 14:47
Ex Cathay 747 checkie, CASA Delegate and ATO, one of the founding members of LOSA, current/former committee member of GAPAN, RAPAC. In addition to this, also formerly a senior executive of CASA. There is also quite a bit I have missed.

These titles and aircraft types do not necessarily command respect for the owner. That said, he is entitled to his opinion which is wide open to critical comment as seen in some of these posts.

MyNameIsIs
12th Jul 2010, 22:30
You don't look at Proon for a weekend and look what happens.

I don't think I have seen so much insecurity about a Tertiary education EVER. And this is from guys on here whose opinions I respected.

I do love the 'not all but most Uni trained pilots I've flown with' or the 'I'd rather fly with a dumbarse' comments. Cos I'm sure you've flown with a large cross section in order to make that statement right? :rolleyes:


j3, you obviously didn't read the rest of my post:
You'll get people who can and cannot fly well whether they have done the "bush" road or the "uni" road.

.......

But to categorically state that a "uni" taught pilot will be better just because they did the diploma/degree/whatever, then that is simply wrong. Vice versa.


My opinion is that a tertiary education itself may (not will) not produce a better pilot just because it is a tertiary education.


And for what its worth, I've flown in 3 countries including 5 states and 1 territory of Australia; probably 10+ different nationalities of colleagues, some uni some not. Not as large a cross-section as some, but still varied enough to have some idea.

Phot
13th Jul 2010, 02:02
What would you expect considering the editor of FSA has never even had a flying lesson. She doesn't know jack s#@t about aviation.

A few issues ago they had to print a correction cos they didn't know the difference between a ELT, PLB and an EPIRB.

And they would like us to read this rag every two months.... it just goes to show how out of touch CASA is.

Oktas8
13th Jul 2010, 07:18
OK, I'll bite this hook...

I've had lots of flying lessons, and I still don't know the difference between an ELT and an EPIRB.

Woe is me... :sad:

Mr. Hat
13th Jul 2010, 08:21
Total rubbish. The article is just another advertisement for universities. Until the degree is a minimum requirement the whole 3 years is a waste of cash and time.

4Greens
13th Jul 2010, 20:39
The number of extraordinary diatribes against degrees is perhaps is an argument for them. A bit more open mindedness please.

Captain Sand Dune
14th Jul 2010, 00:51
Oh FFS!!! The RAAF have been doing this since Pontius was a pilot. Guys got a degree at the RAAF Academy at Point Cook in the old days, now at ADFA. They then went on to pilots course.
I have instructed both ADFA and direct entry types, and there is absolutely no evidence to suggest that those with degrees performed better than those without, and vice versa. Additionally there is no evidence to suggest that pilot graduates with degrees do better out in the squadrons than those without, and vice versa.
There are good guys and plonkers - regardless of whether or not they have a couple of letters after their name!!

Ando1Bar
14th Jul 2010, 03:52
While we're going around in circles discussing the merits of uni grads as pilots, how about I put the following out there:

Pilots who learn to fly in Cessnas are better aviators in the long run.

mcgrath50
14th Jul 2010, 04:49
CSD, while in the recruitment pipleine I was told more ADFA guys finished pilot training without getting scrubbed than DE guys. Maybe that claim is like the Unis saying it will look good to the airlines?

Captain Sand Dune
14th Jul 2010, 06:27
More ADFA guys get through pilot training then DE coz they put through more ADFA guys!!
Wouldn't believe too much from DFR these days. They lost a lot of credibility when the function was "out-sourced".

frothy
13th Sep 2010, 07:16
Haven't got round to reading the latest issue, not like the old "Crash Comic". They got read as soon as they arrived cover to cover in the one sitting.
Are the promised follow up articles appearing.

Frothy