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-   -   NATS interview process (https://www.pprune.org/atc-issues/265195-nats-interview-process.html)

daveosger 15th January 2008 16:07

Manchester and swanwick are preferable, but anywhere will do, i'd like to visit at least two establishments so prestwick or any other areodrome are not a problem for me

petedavis 17th January 2008 06:46

Hi,

Does anyone have any advice for stage 3? like the extremely in depth descriptive for stage 2 above

Thanks

RadarRambler 19th January 2008 03:51

not checked but doesnt that nats web site now detail the interview process in more detail?

q2663589 19th January 2008 09:06

Hello, I've also made it to stage 3 and would like to visit Manchester A.C.C on or before the 18th Feb. If anyone as visited there and could give me the relevant contact details it would be very useful. Also, can anyone who as done stage 3 just clear up whether it consists of one interview with two interviewers ( A.T.C and H.R ) or two interviews, one with each?
Ta very much.

X-L 19th January 2008 12:22

My stage 3 near the end of last year had one interview with two interviewers (one HR and one ATC) and the other stage 3 fun and games.

RadarRambler 20th January 2008 14:53

With how the procedures and tests have changed over time, and also the job, it would be quite interesting to see how many ATCO's would pass the tests and interviews today

TCR 21st January 2008 14:03

Quick question
 
Can you get into the college in Bournemouth and never become an ATCO?
If so, how often does this happen. I know people do resits on their exams etc., but is there a limit to how much/often you can do this? What options do NATS leave you if you continue to fail your exams?

TCR 21st January 2008 14:14

I thought of another one..
 
How often a year does the college start new courses? I know they do the stage ones all year round, so you can always get into one of them, but is it just Sept & Jan that they take in new "students".

I only ask because I get to reapply for stage one in May, but would preferably like to start the college later than Sept as I have just started a new job and wouldnt want to leave it 4 or 5 months after I started. I know this is kinda getting ahead of myself again but I know that sometimes people going through the recruitment process can go from stage one to college in a matter of weeks!

Also, I recently contacted NATS HR asking when I get to reapply this year. They said 26th April, as this was the date last year when my stage one was (that i consequently failed as a result of the online personality questionnaire.) So, would it be OK for me to wait a few months to resubmit my application, or would NATS think I wasn't bothering again this year?

I'm not really in a rush because I would like to save up lots of money to survive the lousy salary that a TATC receives, should I ever get past stage bloody one!! Me no like personality questionnaires...:ugh:

smellysnelly2004 21st January 2008 16:19

New basic course just started - there will 3 more this year at 13 week intervals.

smellysnelly2004 21st January 2008 17:53

In response to your first question TCR, there are many people that don't get through the college - roughly 30-40% success rate at a guess.
After that the validation rates at units vary from 25-90% - only based on hearsay and what I've read on here.
IF you fail a written exam/oral board at the college you will get one more go, then if you fail again, you fail the course and go to a training analysis where they decide if you warrant a recourse. If not, you get a training review where you can 'argue your case'. In general if you fail a particular course twice you will no longer be employed - there are some exceptions to this but not many. However, you can fail one course, pass the second time, then fail the next course, get a recourse etc Some people, who want to stay with the company, get jobs as ATSA's or in admin.

mcn 21st January 2008 21:00

Hi. Has anyone who recently went through the stage 2 interview have any tips on it? thanks.

Vic154 21st January 2008 21:40

Hey mcn,
If you back one page you will see an incredibly helpful post by Nokio about Stage 2.
Good luck...
Vic

hatemyjob 23rd January 2008 17:34

I have the first stage of NATS testing coming up and I was just wondering if anyone could provide me with an example of the sort of questions they ask during the motivational section of the testing so I have an idea of what to expect?

smellysnelly2004 23rd January 2008 17:56

Hatemyob,

This very thread is full of the info you require

1967kev 23rd January 2008 19:36

Hi everyone,

I have my 3rd stage interview mid-February. As preparation for this, I have visited "Scottish" and "Oceanic" at Prestwick, I have also visited Glasgow Tower. I have read the book "Air Traffic Control" by Graham Duke and I have also been studying the motivation pdf's like there is no tomorrow. The only problem is, I don't know if this is enough!!!:confused:

I was wondering if anyone who has been through the stage 3 interview could tell me just how technical the interview is....Are they looking for you to have an in-depth knowledge of ATC or a basic understanding of the principles of ATC or somewhere in the middle?!!!

Also, how is the interview split, are you interviewed 50% of the time by the ATCO and 50% of the time by the HR person?

Anways, any feedback is much appreciated

And can I just say as well, anyone who is just starting the NATS recruitment process should read this thread back to front...I wish I had because I would have been much better prepared for stages 1 & 2, some of the posts are extremely helpful.

Cheers

Kevin:ok:

NeoDude 23rd January 2008 20:25

You look to have done almost exactly the same prep as me except I went to EDI instead of Glasgow. You'll be fine, just relax :)

chaudhrysahab 24th January 2008 16:57

1st stage test
 
Replying to hatemyjob:-

For Motivation test, they provide notes to read thoroughly but i thing it is very important that you must know about numerical reasoning because in the test you will be asked questions like (Example) If an Aircraft is flying 350 knots & have 20 mins fuel and runway is 100 miles away so how long does it take to land. :ugh:
Make sure you wel prepared for spatial reasoning with time, i mean you should be able to do 40 quesions in 20 mins. :cool:

Good luck. :ok:

billy girl 24th January 2008 20:49

Hi,

This is to the guys at the college. Am starting there shortly and trying to sort out budget! Is it just the £10,000 now? Last time I heard there was a £60 weekly non-taxable allowance in addition to the £10k. Has that been dropped?

Cheers,

Sarah

smellysnelly2004 24th January 2008 20:53

Currently £10,000 plus tax free £60 a week living allowance
Works out about average £950 take home a month

billy girl 24th January 2008 21:12

Whew! You're a star - cheers for that!

Sarah

Diem 26th January 2008 23:40

Hi all, just about read this entire thread, alot of helpful info!
I applied through the website the other day and was immediately requested to book a time for my stage 1.
I feel like I should make sure this is something I can do before wasting anyone's time though.
My main question is, after the college is it possible to request where you'll be posted? Anywhere in Scotland would be fine (nothing against you English types :)) or would you have to wait a few years for availability (if thats even a possibility.)

Thanks.

timelapse 27th January 2008 00:20

Sadly, you have absolutely no real way of choosing where you are posted. It really is done on business need and where you would be best suited in terms of the work, where you're likely to do well and validate, not which location would suit you.

There's a guy who's just gone through college whos life is in Aberdeen, girlfriend is in Aberdeen, held at Aberdeen between courses, the Manager ATC of Aberdeen really wanted him to work there - and he got Cardiff.

You, of course, may equally get exactly where you want but it's russian roulette at the best of times and it changes every other minute as regards where needs people and how badly.

Obviously also the different disciplines will direct you to certain places. If you get sent onto the area course then there's only really 3 choices of where you can be posted (Manchester/Swanwick/Prestwick) - but if you get sent onto the airports courses then clearly the choice is far more widespread. As regards whether you can choose to do the airports/area courses - you can make a preference but again - it's a business need decision. There are people going through at the moment who made no request onto the airports course, but got them anyway even though they presumed, and were told, that if they made no request onto airports they were going to get area.

So there you go!

Diem 27th January 2008 01:18

Thank you for the insanely quick - and in depth - reply Timelapse!
I'll go for the stage 1 anyway (its free!) and see how it goes from there. Darn family ties! :)
Thanks again.

smellysnelly2004 27th January 2008 07:42

Timelapse has got it absolutely spot on.
I will add one thing which may help though. Our CDM said to us that as we were mobile grades an could be sent anywhere (you have to sign a bit of paper saying so) the best tactic regarding posting is to think of the worst possible place you could be sent and be prepared to go there. Not saying that's where you'll be but if you're ready for the worst, you can only be pleasantly surprised.
You are asked where your preference is but that is the last consideration after business need, where your skills are best suited and a hefty dose of black magic!!

nieldo 27th January 2008 13:50

Hi all, first post :).

Im hoping to apply for NATS in September 09, I currently have bugger all GCSE wise and am going back to college for a year In September 08 to redo English and maths which will bring the total GCSE grades at A-C to 4. I have read on the NATS site that they require 5 passes A to C, is this an absolute must have?

To get 5 I would need to take another course but I have the important ones down already (English, maths and science), and I cant see what else would be relivent to the job. I dont really fancy taking an extra course just to make it magic number 5 but I will if I must :).

Also, Ive read this thread from start to finish and I can see it being a great help to people going through the stages now, read it if you can!

Edit: Also, can I apply to join NATS before I get the results of my GCSE courses? I would like to go through the stages before getting the results, as I am now at the age where I have to pay for college courses and plan to do A levels if I dont make it into NATS. It would be a shame to pay for the A levels then get accepted into NATS and leaving a fully paid for course, or not applying at my college but not getting into NATS therefore having to wait a year before starting my A levels.

Just to note, I will be applying at NATS every year like clockwork till I make it :) aviation is where I belong.

Ivor_Novello 27th January 2008 14:03


I will add one thing which may help though. Our CDM said to us that as we were mobile grades an could be sent anywhere (you have to sign a bit of paper saying so) the best tactic regarding posting is to think of the worst possible place you could be sent and be prepared to go there. Not saying that's where you'll be but if you're ready for the worst, you can only be pleasantly surprised.
Unfortunately that is the catch of an otherwise interesting deal of free training (and a wage) and a secure well paid profession at the end of the training (if you pass).
Imagine the queue if the same route was introduced to pilot jobs...

I must confess that one of the main factors that were holding me back frrom applying was not being able to choose where you work, but unfortunately that's the way NATS do it.
If there's a shortage of skills and ATCOs that's also one of the reasons.
I don't mind the initial low salary, but I am "worried" about where I could end up posted. After all once you unplug the headset you got to live somewhere and if it's somewhere you don't want to be, it can be hard.
I am sure there's a lot of people with skills who are put off from applying because of having no control whatsoever over where you'll end up living and working for the rest of your career.....

regards

Ivor

timelapse 27th January 2008 15:30

It should be noted that once you validate somewhere you can always request to transfer to another unit.. it takes a while and isn't always possible but it happens alot from what I hear.

Diem 27th January 2008 17:14

Thanks for all the info everyone.

This might seem like a strange question, but do ATCOs have mortgages?
If you can be posted to another unit at the other end of the country it at any time it seems like a wasted investment.

petedavis 27th January 2008 17:18

Is there a certain number of years return service with NATS after passing the college course? Surely there must be otherwise people who didn't get a posting they wanted would just disappear after validation. Or am I wrong?

timelapse 27th January 2008 17:21

Nope there's no bonding at all..

smellysnelly2004 27th January 2008 17:26

On the Area side of things there really isn't much of an issue with bonding (provided people are planning on staying in the UK) as you would have to work for NATS regardless.
For airports/aerodromes then yes, I suppose you could argue that you get posted somewhere you didn't like and bugger off - but if you were training with NATS then presumably your preferred posting was at a NATS airport who are unlikely to take you after walking out on another NATS unit.

Gonzo 27th January 2008 17:41

Also bear in mind that if you leave before validating, then technically you don't even have a rating to be able to sell yourself with. I think you need the have started an SRG approved unit training plan within one year of finishing the course.

petedavis 27th January 2008 18:57

Gonzo, I've noticed reading this thread that you conduct stage 3 interviews? Is this something you still do and if so, at which locations? Also are you open to bribes? ;)

Gonzo 27th January 2008 19:40

  • I do
  • I can be anywhere
  • Yes.

Two of the above are true.

petedavis 27th January 2008 19:48

Well the third was a joke! :)
Any tips on what you look for in the interviews?

Gonzo 27th January 2008 19:56

Well, I have written at length throughout this thread on things I like to see....preparation being a good starting point.

To be honest, the other areas we look for are characteristics that you either have or you don't have.

I don't think that the interviews we run are any different to any other, so the sort of things every interview candidate should be doing before an interview will stand you in good stead......doesn't mean you'll be successful of course, I could be faced with the best prepared candidate in the world but (s)he might not get through because of other factors.

timelapse 27th January 2008 20:39

Just to update something Gonzo said.. it's 6 months now - between completing a rating course and starting a unit training plan.. otherwise you have to do an APC (a few days back at the college to remind you/prove to instructor that you can still do it all!) before you can begin the training at a later date...and that's provided that your student licence hasn't expired! (2 years).

So yeah, you'd want to be getting valid!

timhan0 27th January 2008 20:42

I'm potentially applying in 2009, been following this thread recently.

One aspect I'd like someone to elaborate upon is the 1st stage tests where I have read people explaining about questions such as:

aircraft is 'xx' miles/km from an airport, travelling at 'xx' knots descending 'xx' feet etc will it make it to the airport?

I understand the DST triangle formula will be involved but could anyone here please provide a clear example (or two!).

timelapse 27th January 2008 20:47

Aircraft 40 nautical miles away, at 30,000 ft descending at 3000ft per minute and travelling at 240 knots.. can it make it?


240 knots = 4 miles per minute, which means 10 minutes to get the 40 miles to the airport.

3000 feet per minute for 10 minutes means a descent of 30,000 feet.

So in this scenario - depending on the wind, the phase of the moon, etcetc and how much luck the pilot had, and if his callsign was BAW038 or not.. he might just make the runway. Just.

For example :P

fabrifx 27th January 2008 21:10

I'd like to ask a question to you all, maybe Gonzo might be the most suitable person to answer but any information would be greatly appreciated..
I'd like to know whether european citizens can participate in the NATS selection or not. I already tried Eurocontrol and I passed all the tests, group tests but unfortunately I wasn't successful at the interview..I am currently undergoing an ATC selection here in Italy but the process is very very slow as it could take as much as one year and a half from the first test to the medical tests so I was thinking of applying for NATS too..Does anybody know if it's possible? Thanx! :)


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