Royal Navy Careers
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Royal Navy Careers
Hi guys
I have just applied to the Navy for a position as an Air Traffic Control (officer level). I received a very prompt reply today asking me to go to an initial interview- but this is not until mid May.
Do any of you know what I can expect and what I can be doing in the meantime to prepare.
Thanks
Matt
I have just applied to the Navy for a position as an Air Traffic Control (officer level). I received a very prompt reply today asking me to go to an initial interview- but this is not until mid May.
Do any of you know what I can expect and what I can be doing in the meantime to prepare.
Thanks
Matt
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: UK
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If you haven't done so already, you need to get your careers office to send you on a Potential Officers Acquaint Course, which will give you several days on an air station. This will allow you to soak up information about the FAA and talk to ATCOs in the bar and get the inside track from them.
Good luck
Good luck
Red On, Green On
Join Date: May 2004
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The initial interview has no pass/fail, but you'd be advised to turn up looking tidy/smart, and prepared to talk about yourself, and what you have learned so far about the Royal Navy, its role, and the job you want to do.
The interviewing officer will write a shortish report about you that will go with your formal application, and it will be forwarded to the AIB. The report will be factual, and the interviewer makes no written judgement on your suitability.
The interviewer will be able to help you get onto POACs, before you get to AIB. You'll see the officer again before going to AIB, in preparation for AIB itself.
In the meantime use the RN website and other public sources to bone up. If you call in/ring the AFCO they will give/send you useful publications. Ships, Aircraft and Missiles of the RN and RM (CP38) may be a good start, though it's slightly out of date as it was published in 2004.
The interviewing officer will write a shortish report about you that will go with your formal application, and it will be forwarded to the AIB. The report will be factual, and the interviewer makes no written judgement on your suitability.
The interviewer will be able to help you get onto POACs, before you get to AIB. You'll see the officer again before going to AIB, in preparation for AIB itself.
In the meantime use the RN website and other public sources to bone up. If you call in/ring the AFCO they will give/send you useful publications. Ships, Aircraft and Missiles of the RN and RM (CP38) may be a good start, though it's slightly out of date as it was published in 2004.