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Nikkiniks08
14th May 2013, 15:55
Bonjour. My daughter has wanted to be a flight attendant since age 10. We moved to France 5 years ago and this September she has to go to lycee. We live between Bergerac and Villeneuve sut lot in the SW France. Can anyone please advise what qualifications she needs and what sort of lycee she needs to attend. We are struggling to decide. Is it a lycee professional which does commerce or is it a general lycee? Any help with this would be very welcome. Sorry it is in english but my french is not good enough for this conversation. Thankyou.

perceval
15th May 2013, 14:34
Hi ,

I really think it won't matter too much which high school she goes to . After her Bac , she might want to do a BTS in tourism or 'airport careers' or something like that if you want her to do further studies . After that ( the Bac or BTS), she just need to do her flight attendant training with one of the specialised schools ( ESMA montpellier, for example only ) . In the mean time , you can always get her to do things like a first aid course , a BAFA , swimming practice ...maybe summer jobs in the service industry ...etc... and maybe an introduction to flying or a PPL at your local flying club ... Although , careful , she might change her mind and want to become a pilot :ok:

roulishollandais
15th May 2013, 16:32
Although , careful , she might change her mind and want to become a pilot http://images.ibsrv.net/ibsrv/res/src:www.pprune.org/get/images/smilies/thumbs.gif
First verify her health is good enough to get flight attendant or pilot . A physician with aeronautical speciality will be able to check. It will avoid further deception.
She has to live a safe life without drug, alcohol, chosen friends, etc.
To allow her too to get a pilot, help her to learn math, physic, sport !
In any case she hasz to study foreign languages (probably she will speak fluent English at home ?)
So a scientific section in a european Highschool ("lycée européen") would open the best doors to your daughter. Good teachers, not too many students in the class, but challenging. She has to pass always to the upper class without problem. You have one in Bordeaux.
After the "bac" (mention will help her) she will still be too young to get stewardess, she will learn something more specialized if she wants.
Good luck and Welcome in France to the whole family.

Alsacienne
16th May 2013, 16:04
Perhaps this link might prove helpful for a post-Bac qualification ....

Cca / Hôtesse De L’air (http://www.ecole-tunon.com/fr/cca-hotesse-de-l-air_p177)

All the very best to your daughter ... and make sure she keeps her languages going! It might be worth trying to supplement her language qualifications outside the Baccalauréat by taking the Cambridge series of examinations (First, Advanced and Proficiency) to boost her English and the Goëthe-Institut series - ZDaF (Zertifikat Deutsch aus Fremdsprache) or ZMP (Zertifikat Mittelstufenprufung) ... your local Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCI) may have a languages centre as we have in Colmar.

wiggy
17th May 2013, 21:29
I'd agree with what others here have posted: I don't think the Lycée matters, or even the specific Bac - but she must keep her languages "going". After the Bac would possibly be the time to look for some sort commercial/marketing qualification that will make her more attractive to the airlines.

KAG
25th May 2013, 14:07
What the airlines like to see in a flight attendant resume: "voyage linguistic".

Send your daughter in a foreign country to learn a new language during the summer holidays.

I have been years ago a flight attendant for Air France for a bit less than a year, it was a really nice experience and it paid my instructor rating :ok:
Years later I am captain on the same kind of airplanes I was working on as a cabin crew :)

Alsacienne
25th May 2013, 20:14
"voyage linguistic"

Being pedantic, I think that a prospective employer would prefer to read

'voyage linguistique'

shinners
26th May 2013, 11:59
I have been years ago a flight attendant for Air France for a bit less than a year, it was a really nice experience and it paid my instructor rating
Years later I am captain on the same kind of airplanes I was working on as a cabin crew


That's a sweet story, I hope I'll be able to do the same thing:ok:

Manflex55
9th Jun 2013, 01:10
I have been years ago a flight attendant for Air France for a bit less than a yearCa change de celles qui y sont depuis 50 ans. La moyenne d'âge des hôtesses à AF c'est le double de celle de Virgin.