Old 05-25-2008 | 07:50 PM
  #16  
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USMCFLYR
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From: FAA 'Flight Check'
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Originally Posted by JF48
First of all I'd like to say hello, and thanks in advance for any advice or opinions you provide me. It is greatly appreciated.

Let me tell you a little about myself: I am an 18 year old soon to graduate high school student with hopes and dreams of one day operating a 150,000lb. piece of machinery at mach .88 30,000ft above the ground, and living to tell about it. (sounds a lot better than an office job to me ) Actually, this has been my life goal, well, for as long as I can remember. Now that I am graduating high school and finally at the point in my life where I can start realizing my dream, I am at a complete loss as to where to start.

I guess my first question is about university. Where to go and what to take? I know I want to get at least a bachelor's degree. (not only because it looks good on a resume, but also because I don't want to go through life uneducated) Do employers in the airline industry favor certain degrees over others? Or is it only about hours and certifications?

My last question (for now, there will be more, oh, there will be more) is about getting hours and certifications. I've seen ads for flight schools that will take you from your PPL through ATP with all the ratings et cetera. Are these schools worth dropping the money on? Or should I just rent planes and get my hours?

-Also, I live just on the Illinois side of the river across from St. Louis. It's an easy commute to Lambert Airport for me, If that makes any difference.

Well, that's it for now. Once again if anyone has any tips and pointers it is greatly appreciated.

- thank you

Edit: I was not sure where to post this, so, if there are any mods out there that could place it in the right forum, that would be wonderful.
I got a degree in aviation also and thank goodness for me! If I hadn't gotten into something that I was extremely interested in then I wouldn't have finished college on a strong note and my life would be much different - who knows which way better or worse - but different Friends with me in the aviation degree learned more of the business side of aviation so I'm sure they could apply that knowledge to a business minor or in the business world. In the end - I say study at what you are interested in and might someday make a good living at. A lot of people I know have a degree in something that they never planned on using or have never used in the *real* world (except for some of the more technical degrees of course)
I don't know much about the "puppy" mills that a lot of people on the forum don't seem to like. I've never trained under one - but I do know this; whether it is a small school or a pilot mill - a structured syllabus with goals established for each training flight - briefs and debriefs - check flights along the way with someone other than your primary instructor, etc.... sure helped me. I did much better under that system than the more non-structured (so what do you want to work on today) approach.
Of course at your age - there is the military option too

USMCFLYR

-Sorry - hadn't read all of the posts yet. Forget that military option.

Last edited by USMCFLYR; 05-25-2008 at 07:54 PM. Reason: New info
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