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4-5 day ppl exam courses

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4-5 day ppl exam courses

Old 6th Feb 2018, 23:13
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4-5 day ppl exam courses

This purely to get some thought and opinion.....
You see a lot of courses offered for ‘ppl theory all 9 exams passed in 5 days including RT practical’ normally costing around a grand for the service. Just to clarify, I did all mine with an ATO over a period of weeks with self study in between classroom sessions and exams a couple of years ago.

These fast track services seem woefully inadequate to me and I fail to see how an ab-initio student can possibly learn and understand the required theory across all 9 subjects in just 5 days. Anyone can learn the answers to the question banks to pass the exams but ALL the required material in 5 days?

My opinion is that these services undermine the importance and requirements of learning the required theory for the PPL. I get that the ppl syllabus is considerably less in content than cpl/atpls but even so, the content and learning requirements deserve more than five days crammed all in and should treated with equal importance and diligence.

Thoughts please.
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Old 6th Feb 2018, 23:28
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[QUOTE=TangoAlphad;
(In my defence there were many many many other things in my past that caused older me to question younger me's intelligence..)[/QUOTE]

Yes, I am in that club too.......
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Old 7th Feb 2018, 08:41
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Over the years I have seen ground training as unsatisfactory. At one stage there was someone doing ground training over three weekends plus homework. Someone else ran PPL ground training as an evening class at a college of further education, but these days you need a teaching qualification to teach at a college of FE, and it is unlikekt they will consider a FI rating as a teaching qualification.
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Old 7th Feb 2018, 09:38
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I was in a flying school recently where one of their PPL students had a pass in the EASA ATPL exams. They were concerned that he did not have the level of knowledge they expected for a candidate on a PPL course!

Initially, EASA proposed a 100 hour ground school for the PPL but as Instructor's don't get paid for theoretical instruction, it crumbled under the opposition.
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Old 7th Feb 2018, 13:41
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Our students readily agree to paying for long pre-flight briefings, once it is explained that they will save costs in the air and that I want the instructors to be paid for ground duties. Many clubs and schools do little or no briefing causing an increase in repeated flight exercises.


Those students that struggle with self study for the writtens get one to one ground school and pay an even higher hourly rate. Again, the students benefit as well as our instructors.
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Old 7th Feb 2018, 17:33
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Over the years I've had a few students who've been through these courses, some have been very good but many have not retained sufficient of whatever they were taught. One student told me he'd been on a "guaranteed pass" course (in the south) and failed an exam, the instructor/examiner gave him a small amount of tuition on the questions he'd got wrong and then gave him the same paper and answer sheet back. He passed - surprise!

My approach is to first get people to read the book and then to spend time with me so we can go through the important bits of the syllabus as a Q&A, with me filling-in any gaps or improving their understanding. They then take the exam straight away unless one of us thinks they need more study or tuition. The Q&A time varies with subject and how well prep'd they are, min about 40 minutes and max 2-3 hours. I've had a couple of people do 4 exams in a 12 hour day, but they are the minority and were unusually able and well prep'd. Usually people prepare 2 or 3 subjects.
This seems to produce knowledgeable pilots and a very good first time pass rate.

HFD
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Old 7th Feb 2018, 18:46
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I always thought it would be a good fall back if you lost your medical or licence.
Advertise course and run evening class at local community school or village hall that could be rented. You would probably earn more than instructing at PPL level.No flying school to run. No responsibility for sending students solo or wondering what a renter is going to do.
I see R/T examiners don't seem to do to badly from the charges i have seen for some ground and practical tests. (My months wage in a day with four candidates. I would have to do 5 skill tests to earn the same amount of money over 3-4 days).
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Old 7th Feb 2018, 22:01
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Thanks for all your replies. Good to see that opinion is so one-sided. I think there is definitely an argument for a more structured requirement for ppl ground school and even an argument for qualifications required to teach subjects i.e. current or previously held FI certificate - there are assessed lectures as part of the FI course. Correct me if I am wrong, but I don’t think there is any specific quals needed for this? Or Something akin to a rating in order to teach the theory?
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Old 8th Feb 2018, 08:44
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it crumbled under the opposition.
Hardly that. The 100 hour requirement is still included in AMC1 FCL.210; FCL.215 and is applied elsewhere in Europe. All that happened is that the UK CAA issued an Alternative Means of Compliance that removed any reference to a minimum number of hours.

The logic for the 100 hour figure was the credit awarded to the holder of a PPL holder commencing a modular ATP theoretical knowledge course compared with an ab-initio entrant to an integrated course.
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Old 9th Feb 2018, 00:05
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Correct me if I am wrong, but I don’t think there is any specific quals needed for this? Or Something akin to a rating in order to teach the theory?
To be able to offer these courses you need to be an ATO (Old RF) - complete with a "Head of Training" and a "Chief Theoretical Knowledge Instructor" (These may be the same person, and may not necessarily be known as those post holders). It takes some work to obtain an ATO to undertake this type of training.

To be able to teach on this or any ground school you have to satisfy the CTKI/HT that you have the required knowledge yourself. Some CTKI's may require more in the way of satisfaction than others but you don't have to have a FI Certificate or an AOPA Ground Instructor Certificate (if they still exist)

These courses are not meant to be the whole teach - the student is supposed to have at least read the books before attending. In much the same way as there are brush ups for CPL/ATPL lessons these PPL courses exist and provide, IMHO, a valuable service. I agree, some students don't do the pre-study and some courses are a little 'light on content' but that doesn't mean they all are.
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Old 9th Feb 2018, 06:45
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Before too long, the LAPL/PPL exam questions will be totally updated to make them more appropriate and up-to-date.

Current 'question banks' will then become completely useless.
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Old 9th Feb 2018, 08:10
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BEagle?

Will Ground Examiners still be able to administer the new exams? (They're a minor but essential part of my meagre income.)
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Old 9th Feb 2018, 12:31
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I believe so.

The CAA intended to introduce an e-exam system, but those of us on the LAPL/PPL ExamWG included an unyielding requirement for any incorrect answers provided by an applicant who had passed but with less than 100% MUST be properly debriefed by the Examiner.
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 07:00
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"Before too long" ?

Beagle,

Timescale please ?

Will this include a move away from the silly 9 exams that were introduced in 2013 because a certain person at the CAA was unable to understand EASA regulations that mean that "exam(s)" could mean as few as 1, and as many as 9 ?

And then compounded it in 2014 when he realised that it definitely stated "no more than 120 questions".

And will it also exclude all the questions taken straight from the EASA CPL/ATPL question bank ?

We want something that tests knowledge that students should know, excludes the could know/nice to know, and it's should not change. No more of this "let's see if we can poke about in the far corners of the syllabus to see how many candidates we can fail" attitude that has been going on in ATPLs for the past 6 months plus.

I expect AOPA to earn their corn on this.

Especially as the current Ground Examiners have not been consulted.

So....can you fill in some detail please ?

And....why not just publish the question bank like the FAA do ? It shows students what they need to know, and puts all these question banks out of business at a stroke.

As soon it is online, no doubt the questions will be on someone's question bank before long and they will change for it.
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 07:38
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Timetable? Within the current year at a guess.

'Could know / should know / must know' has certainly been applied. Also an end to an incorrect answer to one question automatically leading to incorrect answers in others. Gone too will be the style of 'The answer is a. 1&3, b. 2&3, c. 1&2 or d. 2&4'.

The Authority invited a wide range of participants when the original project was initiated; however, only a few of us have stayed the course. I haven't personally written any questions, but every single question submitted by authors which have passed initial filtering have subsequently been reviewed by a joint CAA / Industry panel of current and retired GA instructors.

The leaking of questions to external question banks has been a thorny issue and was one reason why an e-exam was preferred. If that cannot be achieved and the new questions are printed, we have asked the CAA to consider prosecuting blatant plagiarism under infringement of copyright. But there should be no incentive to cheat, as the new exams are intended to test essential knowledge, rather than trapping with daft questions about the local time in Bombay or whatever.
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 07:40
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Originally Posted by B61

And....why not just publish the question bank like the FAA do ? It shows students what they need to know, and puts all these question banks out of business at a stroke.
Absolutely no support from me for this suggestion. Publishing the question bank just means the vast majority of students just learn the answer with no incentive to understand the theory. It’s effectively what happens now. We should be encouraging a desire to know why something happens or works or doesn’t.
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 07:58
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students just learn the answer with no incentive to understand the theory.
And that's where the examiners should step up to the mark with "and why is the answer C?" What is often forgotten (by both parties) is the requirement to convince the examiner you know what your talking about...
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 08:23
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Originally Posted by Duchess_Driver
And that's where the examiners should step up to the mark with "and why is the answer C?" What is often forgotten (by both parties) is the requirement to convince the examiner you know what your talking about...
But they have already passed an exam that should be testing that. Is a skills test examiner really going to fail a candidate that has flown well because of a shaky answer? Make the theory exams test theory knowledge. Don’t just encourage a ‘tick box’ mentality.
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 08:43
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TA.

I wasn't suggesting that an examiner shouldn't be able to cx a skills test. More that he should have a very reasonable expectation that the candidate already has the requisite knowledge. That should be assured by the theortical exams and I don't believe it can be merely by publishing the questions and letting the candidate learn to tick box C
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Old 10th Feb 2018, 08:51
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B61 I couldn't agrree more

"absolutely no support from me for this suggestion"

Why? As what we have at the moment is every single answer on the internet. You could pass every paper with one hours study.

As reassuring as beagle's comments are. The CAA announced when they first went to 9 papers how they consulted with experts. Yet despite being told they were not fit for purpose they pushed them through.

I'm expecting them all to go online. They will remain as 9 exams and the candidate will be billed the same cost as an ATPL written exam. All of which will go to the CAA. And within a week all the answers will be for sale on some android app.

And beagle don't make me laugh about the CAA taking legal action about copyright of exam questions. The CAA don't take any action when a school refuses to release exams results when a student moves to a different school
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