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View Full Version : Singapore's Newest Flight School: Scam or the real thing


PNY
22nd Aug 2009, 15:39
On Thursday I was doing a CAAS medical when I met 2 young men, one from Ecuador and another from Singapore, and they were getting ready to dish out US$125,000 +++ 2 years of expenses, to participate in what they told me was Singapore's first MCPL program with ST Aviation Training Academy at Seletar Airport.

Having a son of my own that I hope will also learn the trade when he is old enough and his feet can reach the rudder pedals, I could not resist to talk to them to get more inforamtion.

These young men seem to think for this US$125,000 +++ that they are going to get a Singapore MCPL, something that does not exist and I explained to them that they would probably get Australian MCPL and that it is unlikely the Singapore CAAS will recognize it.

I wanted to be real gentle with them, no one should despair another person's dream in life I say, but they were firm in thinking that the Singapore CAAS would actually issue them the CAAS license and even further advised that they would all hope to eventually fly as First Officer's for Tiger Airways.

Apparently the Director of Training for Tiger Airways, as well as Tamesek Poly, was part of the interview they had with the Singapore Technologies Aviation Training Academy (Singapore) Pte Ltd.

Now is this a scam or is it the real thing for these young hopefuls??? I understand that 50 or so cadets that went through the CPL program in Australia still don't have jobs.

Your thoughts gentlemen... am I wrong to think so... in the middle of a recession no less...

wannabe15
23rd Aug 2009, 03:48
I was told that the MPL is a trial beta program, meaning at any point along the course duration, if the program is not successful, it will revert to the traditional CPL/MEIR issued by the CASA at a cost lower then 125K.

It is true that CAAS and the other relevant agencies are still going through the merits of the MPL.

But yes, if the 2 boys successfully go through the MPL program, there is an offer of employment opportunity at both Tiger Airways and Jetstar as part of the MPL course entails learning the SOPs (either Tiger or Jetstar) for A320 TR course.

Macarto
23rd Aug 2009, 06:22
When does the MPL multi-crew training phase starts? I heard the facility over at Seletar Airport is a Simulation centre and some of the training phase are held over at Nanjing and Australia Ballart. Can Anyone distinguish how different is the training over at Ballart where ST Aviation trains Pilot trainees CPL/MEIR while the training here is MPL. Are there any significant advantages and disadvantages between them?

PNY
23rd Aug 2009, 14:01
Perhaps it's just me but is the CAAS that close to reviewing the merits of a MCPL that people should just fork out US$125,000 in the middle of a recession no less for an alleged job with 1 of 2 low cost carriers flying 9V aircraft in 2 years time.

Last I heard the CAAS was taking a long wait and see attitude to this whole MCPL. I think there are only 3 or 4 countries doing it right now and North America or Europe is not one of them either.

A few weeks ago, in The Straits Times, we all read about a institution here in Singapore that was licensed to operate by the MOE and it turned out to be nothing more than a Diploma mill and lot's of unsuspecting people lost a lot of money.

Having been flying for over 25 years now, with a son who I also hope will do the same too someday, I worry about this because I would not want it to give aviation, or Asia in general, a bad name.

Not to mention that is backed up by Singapore Technologies too, nothing is infallable!

anito4a
24th Aug 2009, 09:14
Singapore Flying College were also keen on the MPL at one stage. I don't know whether this is still the case. They did have a Baron-By-Pass program (whereby cadets went straight from flying the C172 direct to the Lear 45) since learning to fly a piston twin had little in common with flying a fast jet. According to a presentation I saw by a training captain from SIA, many 'habits' in flying a piston twin had to be "unlearned" when they get to the Lear stage of their training, thus the reason why the Baron-By-pass program was implemented.

The main reason for introducing the MPL was to fulfill the perceived pilot shortage and train more airline cadet pilots quickly for the right hand seat of a jet, by passing GA altogether. Candidates spend more time in a simulator than they do flying GA training aircraft. Since the pilot shortage is no longer upon us in the industry, the rush for churning out first officers is no longer there.

su47
24th Aug 2009, 10:28
To shed some light on this matter, the Singapore Flying College isn't considering the MPL as a viable training option any time soon. The Ops Manager here at Jandakot just confirmed it in a meeting with the cadets less than an hour ago, the primary reason being that MPL trained pilots will require more training (whether Sim/actual flying hours or what a/c type, it wasn't clarified), thus translating to higher costs. Australian experience on this matter was cited.

However, with regards to whether SIA will take in MPL-trained personnel, I haven't a clue. Perhaps someone much higher up the food chain could clarify on this.

The Baron Bypass program is active, with some cadets going this route, and others continuing on with the Baron program. Our understanding of the rationale for this program is exactly as the poster above has stated.

Furthermore, the five most recent CPL/IR ME private cadets who've completed their Baron program are currently employed in non-aviation related jobs, but that's perfectly understandable given the industry's current situation.

gengis
24th Aug 2009, 10:29
Singapore Flying College were also keen on the MPL at one stage. I don't know whether this is still the case. They did have a Baron-By-Pass program (whereby cadets went straight from flying the C172 direct to the Lear 45) since learning to fly a piston twin had little in common with flying a fast jet. According to a presentation I saw by a training captain from SIA, many 'habits' in flying a piston twin had to be "unlearned" when they get to the Lear stage of their training, thus the reason why the Baron-By-pass program was implemented.

The main reason for introducing the MPL was to fulfill the perceived pilot shortage and train more airline cadet pilots quickly for the right hand seat of a jet, by passing GA altogether. Candidates spend more time in a simulator than they do flying GA training aircraft. Since the pilot shortage is no longer upon us in the industry, the rush for churning out first officers is no longer there.

I've heard this kind of b-s arguments thrown up before. Tell you what - if they put a guy who's never flown a REAL AIRPLANE and got him his licence by "bypassing" essential stages in flying to be in the right seat next to me, #1 he will get no flying from me for a very VERY long time until i am absolutely certain that he/she has truly got his/her act together. Simulators - even Level D - in my book don't handle anywhere like the real thing. Besides, in a sim, you are the ONLY airplane flying around and on the ATC frequency. How's that for realism??? Let alone putting this kind of guy on the right seat of airplanes carrying passengers who paid money expecting to be kept safe from A-to-B, little realising that they've been short-changed and that some of their fellow passengers might actually have more Microsoft Flight Simulator time than the F/O (i'm sure the individuals are enthusiastic, but the training/experience/syllabus that they get sounds woefully pathetic).

This MPL is a sick joke thrown up as a cabbage patch stop gap measure to address shortage of pilots with experience (real experience, not parker pen or MS Flt Sim or Warcraft). The whole thing would actually be funny if we weren't so close to it.

By the way, it used to be an open joke that the CAAS stood for "Committee Against Aviation in Singapore".

leewan
24th Aug 2009, 11:13
Er... pardon my ignorance, but what's this MPL/MCPL thing ? And what's a GA ? :confused:Anyone kind enough to explain ? :)

dream747
24th Aug 2009, 15:32
There's a short article on this in the ST today.

New route for pilot training (http://www.straitstimes.com:80/Breaking%2BNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_420823.html)

wannabe15
24th Aug 2009, 15:54
Can't wait to hear from ST about the MPL program.

Just to add: In all fairness, the USD125k consists of the A320 TR course, which i believed to be in the region of USD60k. So actually to a potential trainee who goes through the traditional route and thereafter take on the TR course, USD125k seems about right?

As for the merits of the MPL, do a google search and there will be pros and cons to the program. I am no expert to judge since i'm only a tiny PPL holder self studying for ATPL subjects. But i understand that Lufthansa in Europe is now on MPL so there could be merits to it. And Lufthansa is no fly by nite carrier.

gengis: I understand your predicament. No pilot (or pax for that matter) would wish to fly with someone with no real experience other then in the sim. i stand corrected but suppose this chap pass his sim check ( and i believed it will be a rigorous check ride no doubt) and release for line training, gradually he will gain the real experience of flying the jet as time progresses? it's like learning how to drive a big bus. Nowadays, SBS transit even have their own sim to train the bus captains. Thereafter they are released to the road and have real road experience with the instructor by their side. Isn't it how these bus captains are trained these days? Is there not a similar vein to what the MPL is providing?

cheers

A37575
25th Aug 2009, 09:36
According to a presentation I saw by a training captain from SIA, many 'habits' in flying a piston twin had to be "unlearned" when they get to the Lear stage of their training

It takes less than one hour in a jet simulator for a good instructor to demonstrate the differences in handling technique. That hoary old myth about pistons to jets has been around for years. Why am I not surprised that "a training captain" from SIA still propogates it...

The Baron of course requires better manual flying skills than a Lear - especially with one engine inoperative. That said, there is no doubt the Baron autopilot system is rudimentary compared to that of the Learjet.

With most international operators including Singapore Airlines, manual flying skills - including raw data instrument flying - which was once a pre-requisite to holding any professional pilot's licence, are no longer considered an essential requirement for command in modern airliners. This is why full use of all automatics are encouraged by airliner manufacturers and in flight simulators.

For that reason, by-pass of the Baron direct to Learjet training is understandable -particularly as the accent with many operators is on autopilot management rather than pure flying ability. But to claim that so called "habits" from piston twins have to be unlearned when a student gets to Learjet flying, is nonsense.

Dani
25th Aug 2009, 10:02
Gengis, like it or not, but MPL FOs are here and fly. There is a number of reputed airlines in Europe (and soon all over the world) who train their pilots into an airliner without ever gained a PPL or CPL. MPL doesn't mean you don't fly. It consists of a number of hours in light single and twin engined aircraft. Experience has shown that it works. They are still in the beginning, so the way they are teached may still change. But it will come, one way or another.

You wont even tell the difference when you meet your ab initio FO the first time - MPL or conventionel training.

Dani

gengis
25th Aug 2009, 12:51
Dani:

Gengis, like it or not, but MPL FOs are here and fly. There is a number of reputed airlines in Europe (and soon all over the world) who train their pilots into an airliner without ever gained a PPL or CPL. MPL doesn't mean you don't fly. It consists of a number of hours in light single and twin engined aircraft. Experience has shown that it works. They are still in the beginning, so the way they are teached may still change. But it will come, one way or another.

You wont even tell the difference when you meet your ab initio FO the first time - MPL or conventionel training.


Well, like it or not, none of these guys will get any flying from me. Change will come, one way or another - I will do all the flying and unless/until i see that they are up to par AS I EXPECT IT, that's how it will be.

Such guys will only get PM roles, but I wouldn't even bet on their R/T being up to it. They can come out of the 200 hrs in a sim - where the only airplane that ATC needs to talk to is YOU - and i wanna watch them thrown into the deep end at JFK/LAX/LHR.

Yes, change will come... and i'm looking forward to it.

Dani
26th Aug 2009, 17:51
I don't know how much you know about MPL, but where I come from, MPL students fly nearly as much on the real training aircraft as did conventional trained ones. The only difference is that:


they perform airliner oriented training from the beginning
flying is done in view of future two man cockpit role
they only do 1 test for a license, that is the one at the end.


I fail to see from your post if you are against MPL only or against ab initio trained pilots. I agree that I wouldn't put such a guy right away in a long haul cockpit, but these guys (ab initio that is) fly around in major airlines for the last 4 decades. If you would be trainer in such an airline, you would be given a choise to fly with them or to quit.

I guess your preoccupation comes from the fact that your FOs always where very experienced GA or turboprop regional pilots. I have been ab initio, regional and mainline pilot so I think I can tell the difference.

I don't know where you are flying but also ab initios fly around daily in high density airports and they do a good job. Well, I don't know if you find them in JFK, LAX or ORD, but you certainly find them en masse over LHR, CDG and FRA. And I still have to hear of a report where they failed. imho PM (PNF) role in such environment is much more demanding than PF.

Dani

gengis
27th Aug 2009, 06:15
Dani,

No i am not "anti ab-initio". All of the last 4 major carriers that i have flown for have had ab-initio pilots and i have found little difference between them in the cockpit.

What i do not accept is a pilot training program that reduces actual flying from 230 hours (which though barely minimal, is just about sufficient) to something of the order of 50 hours in an actual airplane (which by the way is the criteria for PPL) while doing the rest in a flight simulator. You will not convince me that 50 hours in a light airplane is anything adequate; for all the "differences" between single-engine pistons & 2-crew jets, there are some constants that are always the same - you pull n the houses get smaller; push n they get bigger... etc. And those goats who are now big-time management pilots talking b-s like "unlearning things" have themselves forgotten that they learned to fly from EXACTLY these same "light airplanes". Very likely, those early habits & lessons that they learned from there has kept them alive until today, to enable them to get to this podium from which they are now talking such crap. But back to the original point - even more so you will not convince me that flying more in the sim will take care of the deficit (of actual flying). Simulators - even the latest Level D ones - do not handle precisely as the real thing does (80-90% is not sufficient fidelity). Simulators all have an element of lag. The feel is not the same as the airplane. Simulators are fine for training a guy to learn his scans, do his procedures & read checklists - not teach flying. We all benefited from simulators during type conversions not because we learned flying from it, but BECAUSE WE ALREADY KNEW HOW TO FLY. The simulators just gave us the chance to practice new procedures in that new airplane type that we were transitioning to.

To tailor a program - and package it up with a nice sounding name - while at the same time severely curtailing a pilot in the development of his flying is IMHO a pathetic failure on the part of people who should know better. First and foremost, Pilots FLY. Things like crew co-ordination & teamwork matters are easily dealt with at the 2nd stage of training. All of a pilot's advance training is built on the premise of a strong & firm foundation in flying. Don't get the cart before the horse. And don't even try to convince me that "oh never mind, if these guys can't handle the airplane properly we'll just train them to push the Autopilot Command button because we've now got Fly-By-Wire". This is a disgraceful cop-out. Pilots FLY, pilots MAKE REAL TIME IN-FLIGHT DECISIONS. It is one thing for the newspapers to try to reduce us to some button-pushing lathe machine operators in the eyes of an unknowing public; it is quite something else for PILOTS & people in the aviation fraternity to try to do it.

Simulators COMPLIMENT experience gained from real airplanes; they do not REPLACE the airplane. If you (or any other MPL believer) truly believe that a simulator is equal or better for experience than the real world - be it the first 200+ hours in light airplanes - then let's see you give your 15-yr old 10 days of intensive training in driving a go-cart and then handing him/her the keys to your Porche 911 Carerra for a spin on the freeway. With you in the passenger seat.

Yes, PM is a demanding task in high density environments. But that's about all they'll get out of the sim really well - learning to scan the overhead panels, read the Normal checklists, recall actions, read & do the QRH Non Normal checklist, do a RECALL check, checking EICAS synoptic pages and selecting gear & flaps. And maybe, calculating RTOW & corrected V-speeds for 1-brake de-activated.

Ab-initio is fine. Qualifying pilots who can't actually fly an airplane is not. That is my contention. And if my company puts one of these half-baked graduates next to me, they are in effect making it a one-man operation for me. OK, 1 1/2 men operation.

Dani
27th Aug 2009, 08:04
Thanks, Gengis, for taking your time explaining me your thoughts about pilots training. In fact, I'm not favoring MPL over ab-initio training, but would resist in expressing such rigorous comments about flying with one of them.

I completly agree with you that flying is always more demanding than simulator flying, and that a simulator never can replace the real world.

There are still two different strings of thought in your critic about MPL, one is a fundamental critic over the MPL program and the other the lack of experience of young ab-initios. As I know a lot of MPL *and* ab-initio guys, I can tell you that there is no difference. Quality of every single candidate is much greater, even if kept on the highest standards and rigorous qualification requirements.

When I look back, I started my airline training with about 400h, all of them done on SEL aircraft. I don't think that those hours really made me a better airline pilot. The real training started afterwards. Best training and thus the fundament for every professional pilot is the twin engine IFR flying. And a little bit of high performance aerobatics trainer doesn't hurt. These elements haven't been reduced significantly in MPL training.

We regularly get ab-initio FOs handed over from the training department. They are MPL or conventional trained, and they both have the same problem in the beginning, coming from the complex airline environment and lack of strategical and operational thinking. This gradually becomes better and - after a year or two - they start thinking with you, taking over also complex non-aircraft-related tasks. Compared to FOs with an extensive GA background, I don't see a big difference there. Even with thousands of hours on small planes and experience as GA flight instructors, they do generally not stand out from the ab-inito pilots. Also here, the individual quality of any candidate is much more important than its training background.

I think it also depends on how a flight academy lays out its MPL syllabusses. I don't know the exact legal framework, but I can imagine that there are better MPL courses and not so good ones. And I would imagine that a major airline would not do the absolute minimum laid down in the law. Above mentioned aerobatics trainer pops into my mind.

A general problem I can read between your lines (and I completly agree with it) is the lack of flying expertise of young ab-initios directly upgrading to a fbw computer controlled aircraft. But I guess that is how the future goes, and we cannot go back to the old days of rods and cables. But that is another topic.

Dani

gengis
30th Aug 2009, 05:33
Dani,

When I look back, I started my airline training with about 400h, all of them done on SEL aircraft. I don't think that those hours really made me a better airline pilot.

The experiences & lessons learned from flying solo - even if it's in a single engine - facing real time situations such as weather closing in at destination on a cross country, or getting lost & subsequently recovering your situational awareness, or making a bad decision about something in the flight.... & recovering from it... these things cannot be quantified. While the normal 230-250 hrs is not much by any measure - it is still a far cry better than making belief in a flight simulator under the direction of an instructor who sits behind running the simulator instructor panel.

You never know how much worse a pilot you might have been if not for those "400 hrs" that you started in the airlines with.


The real training started afterwards.

Yes - and i'm willing to bet that this "real" training didn't come from flying flight simulators in lieu of the real airplane.



of strategical and operational thinking.

Compared to FOs with an extensive GA background, I don't see a big difference there. Even with thousands of hours on small planes and experience as GA flight instructors, they do generally not stand out from the ab-inito pilots. Also here, the individual quality of any candidate is much more important than its training background.


I'd say the more important issues are of a guy being competent to operate the airplane in First Officer role (SIC). That means 1) Pilot Monitoring (Pilot Not Flying) & 2) Pilot Flying in the event of a role reversal when he/she gets the leg - and being able to do it in worst case scenarios with situations of high workload & pressure. At this juncture this bread n butter stuff is the greater issue than of "strategical and operational thinking" on the company front. The order of business is SAFETY-PAX COMFORT-ECONOMY in this sequence, not the other way around ECONOMY-PAX COMFORT-SAFETY. If he/she can't handle the airplane properly (i say "properly" not "perfectly"), the first prerequisite - SAFETY - is already not met.

Though nobody hopes it happens, if for example the Capt has a incapacitation & the chips were down with the new FO left to his/her own devices, my money is that the ones with "thousands of hours on small planes and experience as GA flight instructors" would be in a far more advantageous situation having a greater bank of experiences, purely by virtue of having been thrown in deep water before - and having survived there. I say "greater" in that 230+ hours is still way more than the 50 hours of the MPL. One learns to walk before he learns to run. By all means add sim time to the syllabus - no issue here - but not at the expense of cutting flying time in a real airplane. No sim can ever instil the kind of survival instincts that come from a real plane.

MPL proponents are trying to do just that - short cut the time into the right seat by cutting corners at the expense of the trainee pilot.

winglet_fever
30th Aug 2009, 16:04
Hi All,

Isn't Second Officer training supposed to fill in the experience void between 230 hours lighty pilot and of a First Officer?

Where i was trained, i was told piloting is a onward learning job the moment you are given the opportunity at the wheel. In our context, it is a job where the right learns from the left and the left nurtures the right.

Culture clash between an individual and of the company is not unheard of. So, if changing of either is near impossible, why the marriage and to be walking with bitterness?

Just my 5 cents.

WLF

gengis
31st Aug 2009, 08:43
Wannabe:

Nowadays, SBS transit even have their own sim to train the bus captains. Thereafter they are released to the road and have real road experience with the instructor by their side. Isn't it how these bus captains are trained these days? Is there not a similar vein to what the MPL is providing?

No, you are comparing apples with oranges. A bus moves in 2-dimensions at 50-70 km/hr. And no bus DRIVER has to make any serious decisions - not even how much fuel he should be taking. He slows down when the lights turn amber, stops when they turn red & moves when they turn green. He stops when a commuter flags him down or when a passenger presses the stop button. Something goes wrong with the bus & he pulls over to the side of the road - a luxury that no pilot enjoys.. I trust that i don't need to provide you with a list of 100 decisions & thought processes before & during a flight which a pilot needs to make on a daily basis on an ORDINARY flight with nothing going wrong do I?

There is no "similar vein" between driving a bus & flying an airplane at 86% the speed of sound, other than that both are modes of transport.

Dani
31st Aug 2009, 11:40
Thanks, Gengis. When I state that ab-initio FOs have problems in "strategical and operational thinking", then I imply that they can fly. In eighter role, under all circumstances. Otherwise they wouldn't have been checked out. Where I come from, ab-initios are trained, testes and checked until they can handle their aircraft under normal and abnormal condition. They might have problems with cross wind or complex tech problems. Again, it very depends on the individual quality of the candidate. I expect a FO to be able to land an airliner alone in case the captain goes hopps - from day one.

I repeat, I haven't seen any difference between MPL's and conventional ab-initio's in this respect.

A GA-experienced FO doesn't give you the garantee that he will handle the airliner the way he should, if all would fail. In fact, I have witnessed a number of times that they "fall back" into their old GA role if the situation goes hairy.

Also here, a question of the individual quality of the person.

Dani

gengis
31st Aug 2009, 21:00
Well, we will have to agree to differ. In my experience, i have seen many guys who fly the simulator beautifully, yet are pathetic in the airlane. And conversely, i've seen numerous fellas fly the airplane like it was second nature to them, yet were useless in the sim. You MPL guys put too much faith & credence in the simulator - sooner or later you'll find out the truth.

On a personal level, it still remains that no MPL F/O will get any flying in my flight deck for a very long time, were i ever to fly with one. Period.

Dani
2nd Sep 2009, 09:15
I think our opinion are not far away from each other. I completly agree with you that sim is not aircraft and people behave differently, mainly it's a mental problem (i.e. they panic if the conditions get complex).

I would say, the first time you fly with an MPL, you wont even notice (if nobody tells you). But I guess you fly heavy metal, so you wont ever see one.

To summarize it again I repeat that "our" MPLs get nearly as much real flying instruction as the normal ab-initio guys. It's not a matter of hours, but the way they get lessons.

Roger and out,
Dani

gengis
3rd Sep 2009, 09:47
I can tell inexperience a mile off - especially those that are of the canned & scripted type that comes from flying merely in simulated situations.

You can keep "your" MPLs

PNY
10th Sep 2009, 13:26
I spoke to a very well connected friend of mine who is part of Singapore's powers to be and here is what he had to say about all this:

The recent article in The Straits Times and all the hype of STATA doing the MCPL is not going to materialize in Singapore for another 5-6 years at the earliest. The CAAS has too many unanswered questions, the demand for so many pilot's just does not exist, and a very small minority of authorities have approved it as is yet, etc. Yes, when MCPL does get CAAS approval someday then STATA could very well make a lot of money but until then they will be carried by the income generated from sending students to Australia and the parent company Singapore Technologies.

Also, as indicated in The Straits Times, you will hear plenty of hype about many of the Poly's having a MOU's with big fish such as Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. Why? Well that is all about hooking up and making the Singapore Poly's into Colleges / Universities in the near future so that they can then award accredited degrees someday instead of just Diploma's. I think that part is good for the country with just 3 major Universities here and everything else is imported in making it quite difficult for those that live here.

The big fish such as Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University are also hoping to make lot's of money of it too.

ZFT
10th Sep 2009, 13:54
and a very small minority of authorities have approved it as is yet

The list is growing though.

Denmark
Philippines
Australia
China
UK

At APATS in Hong Kong this week, nothing but good was said about the results from the initial MPL program run by Boeing and now other major training organisations including Lufthansa are fully committing themselves to MPL programs.

ZFT
29th Sep 2009, 13:02
Tiger Airways partners ST Aerospace for Singapore's first MPL


ST Aerospace announced that its commercial pilot training academy, ST Aviation Training Academy (STATA), has partnered with low fare airline Tiger Airways for pilot training on its fleet of Airbus A320 under STATA’s Multi-crew Pilot Licence (MPL) curriculum. The MPL programme is the first in Singapore and will kick off with six cadet pilots.
The pilot programme will begin in October and last approximately two years. The student pilots will first undergo ground school in Singapore and flight training in Ballarat, Australia, before embarking on further flight training in multi-crew environment in Singapore. Upon programme completion, STATA - in close collaboration with major industry players as stakeholders that include national aviation authorities, educational institutions, simulation experts and renowned aviation professionals - will evaluate and validate the trial. The six students are expected to graduate together, and will receive an MPL issued by the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS).
On successful completion of the course, Tiger Airways plans to provide the selected trainees with Conditional Contracts of Employment, subject to the MPL licence that will be issued by CAAS, the trainees meeting the carrier’s stringent flying standards and the prevalent pilot requirement of the airline.
Tiger Airways, a leader among low fare airlines, believes that investing in training is one important way of ensuring that Singapore and the industry maintain high standards of pilot professionalism and safety for air travellers. The carrier is also a leader in championing Singapore’s aspirations to be the aviation hub of Asia and provide employment opportunities in the industry.
"Tiger Airways has provided and will continue to provide the relevant oversight on the MPL programme to ensure that all procedures are in accordance with the carrier’s standard operating procedures, which are among the best in the industry. Working with STATA, we will also hone our skills in interviewing techniques to select the best candidates for the inaugural programme."
~ Rosalynn TAY, Managing Director, Tiger Airways Singapore
"In ensuring that our MPL programme is properly developed, we had taken a consultative approach with our stakeholders. We are committed to the quality of our training programmes, and will ensure that our MPL programme is an effective one. It is with this same conviction in quality and higher flying safety that we believe the MPL curriculum is the way of the future for airlines’ pilot training. Compared to traditional methods involving long hours of flying alone on a piston-engine aircraft, MPL employs an enhanced and proper use of state-of-the-art simulation that promotes a multi-crew environment of modern airlines, which will better prepare students for the actual multi-crew operations in their future careers, at the same time making it easier for airlines to determine when pilots will be available for line operations. Although the training duration for an MPL is not necessarily shorter, it offers airlines a more timely delivery of pilots. We are proud to spearhead this initiative with our partners, Tiger Airways and CAAS."
~ Eddie ONG, President, STATA
"As an enabler of the growth of the aviation industry, one of CAAS’ strategic focuses is human resource development. CAAS is pleased to work in close partnership with key industry stakeholders in advancing this important area; in this case STATA and Tiger Airways. The MPL initiative offers an alternative means of pilot training that is both innovative and efficient, and at the same time ensures that pilots are licensed in accordance to CAAS’ standards. The programme will help airlines meet their need for qualified pilots as the demand for air travel grows further."

mercw123
29th Sep 2009, 15:01
Dear all....

1) There is no shortage of Singaporean pilots at the moment. Some of us have been jobless for a very long time while some of us have been instructing in Malaysian academies, from Johor Bahru right up to Sandakan!

2) As flying instructors we agree that the MPL progammes have not proved to be better or superrior to conventional training methods.

3) The talk about MPL has been around since 2006 but many airlines still are not convinced.

4) There is no real need at the moment to give young boys false hope that there is a big demand for MPL trained pilots (its going to be worst for these boys because if they can't secure a job with the airline, they can't even become instructors due to the reduced actual flight experience).

5) I hope that CAAS becomes more transparent with their views on this MPL programme rather than keeping everybody in suspended suspense!

6) Lastly, I think it would be a good idea for local airlines to start hiring Singaporeans who have been working across the causeway for sometime now.

Stallone
3rd Oct 2010, 19:31
now fast forward one yr later, SG is facing severe pilot shortage

dream747
4th Oct 2010, 05:19
Are STATA graduates issued CAAS licenses or still CASA?

dagger19
4th Oct 2010, 06:44
i have a friend who is inside the program and i see that he is doing fine. he will get his PPL by the end of this year.

cancan7
3rd Jan 2011, 04:45
reviving this thread(and prob my first post):

I see that STATA's first batch of pilots have graduated. Anyone knows if they're employed?

I'm seriously considering STATA, but I don't want to relive the nightmare of the poor bloke who paid his own way through SFC and not even being granted an interview by SIA.

cavoknot
11th Nov 2011, 03:47
Well the first 3 batches of STATA's ATPL course graduated with CASA license so they were pretty much screwed :ugh: (one guy got into SFC and had to redo everything). The 4th batch (first batch with CAAS issued) just graduated and have had to source for airlines on their own. I understand they are applying to tiger or Jetstar ( have to fund their own type rating).

First batch of STATA MPL graduated not too long ago. They just cleared their line checks and are flying with Tiger already.

cavoknot
11th Nov 2011, 03:48
On a similar note, I know of guys from the 2nd batch who have been jobless for 3 years.

bloodsucker
11th Nov 2011, 04:11
Cavoknot, do you know if the 700hrs rule still in force? Because a few months back I talked to the Jetstar people and they said that for their advanced cadets, CAAS requires 700hrs, so if the rule is still in force, those STATA cadets are pretty much screwed isnt it?

Blomqvist
11th Nov 2011, 04:25
hmm from what I understand from CTC ACP requirements, if you have the CAAS licence, then the 700h doesnt apply? only applies if u have a foreign licence like CASA and that's when you need 700h to convert? prob a loophole there to help CAAS holders

dream747
12th Nov 2011, 00:08
If you have a CAAS licence then the 700 hours need not apply. Any other foreign licence you'll need to meet that requirement for conversion purposes. There were talks about changing this rule but I don't know what's the progress of it so far.

cavoknot
14th Nov 2011, 09:25
Hi Bloodsucker,

Yes the 700 hours is for foreign license conversion. So they are pretty screwed. However even with CAAS the ATPL needs to be unfrozen with 1500 hours. So unless airlines open up their doors more for ab-intio, it is very hard. Most have to go down the instructor route to gain the neccessary hours.

Errajane
14th Nov 2011, 11:46
Didn't a few people got in to Silk Air recently with just a fresh CPL/IR and 250 TT? If not mistaken, they had Australian or Malaysian licenses.