Liberty University online
#1
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Joined APC: Oct 2019
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Liberty University online
Hey everyone curious about what opportunities would be available after graduating from Liberty. I’m looking into becoming a pilot and the online classes would really work for me since I work full time. I know there are tons of flight hours but I think it’s do able. I have a very good well paying job currently just not fulfilling anymore and don’t wanna make the mistake of paying a ridiculous amount for school to not be worth it. Any input would be appreciated.
#2
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Joined APC: Mar 2019
Posts: 112
I am currently enrolled into the Liberty online classes. I like the classes, and instructors. I like that it’s a Christian school, and I can take Biblical classes for electives. The online flight portion is a bit confusing to me. They have it where if you’re not in Lynchburg, VA you will be at a Flight Affiliate training center. I’ve come to find out from there’s a disconnect with Liberty and the Flight Affiliate. It personally makes me nervous. I bet it’s fine, and I think it all has to do with your flight affiliate as well. I would talk to Liberty, and find out which FTA. Then go to the flight school and check it out, speak to a few instructors, and whoever is in charge. That has been my experience so far. Once you complete your training you can be a CFI, or you can fly commercial at a low time job. A benefit with a 141 school is the 1000 hour R-ATP. Someone can step in and tell us if it’s worth pursuing in the current job market, over an accelerated part 61?
#3
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Joined APC: Feb 2019
Posts: 307
I am currently enrolled into the Liberty online classes. I like the classes, and instructors. I like that it’s a Christian school, and I can take Biblical classes for electives. The online flight portion is a bit confusing to me. They have it where if you’re not in Lynchburg, VA you will be at a Flight Affiliate training center. I’ve come to find out from there’s a disconnect with Liberty and the Flight Affiliate. It personally makes me nervous. I bet it’s fine, and I think it all has to do with your flight affiliate as well. I would talk to Liberty, and find out which FTA. Then go to the flight school and check it out, speak to a few instructors, and whoever is in charge. That has been my experience so far. Once you complete your training you can be a CFI, or you can fly commercial at a low time job. A benefit with a 141 school is the 1000 hour R-ATP. Someone can step in and tell us if it’s worth pursuing in the current job market, over an accelerated part 61?
#4
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Joined APC: Jul 2017
Posts: 285
I started with Liberty in 2017 with a flight affiliate. I am finishing my classes for the bachelor's in aviation in the spring of 2020. It has been all online. I had to take a few classes outside of the aviation major that my transfer credits did not cover. This is my second bachelors degree and I did it specifically for the 1000 hour R-ATP.
Pros- Its all online, books included, teachers are professionals, they have 8 week semesters, flight affiliate made it convenient.
Cons- there is some disconnect between the flight affiliates and the university- but nothing an email or two didn't fix. Its expensive- but you can use student loans for flight training.
Make sure you follow the EXACT details on taking ground and flight classes concurrently so you don't exempt yourself from the R-ATP if thats what your goal is.
I am happy with it. Any legacy carrier is going to require a bachelor's degree so this is a good option- especially if you need the flight affiliate to do the training and student loans to finance flight trainimg
Pros- Its all online, books included, teachers are professionals, they have 8 week semesters, flight affiliate made it convenient.
Cons- there is some disconnect between the flight affiliates and the university- but nothing an email or two didn't fix. Its expensive- but you can use student loans for flight training.
Make sure you follow the EXACT details on taking ground and flight classes concurrently so you don't exempt yourself from the R-ATP if thats what your goal is.
I am happy with it. Any legacy carrier is going to require a bachelor's degree so this is a good option- especially if you need the flight affiliate to do the training and student loans to finance flight trainimg
#5
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Joined APC: Oct 2020
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Posts: 1
I plan on attending Liberty, I am confused about your above message. Another member on another forum also stated the classes and flights are not concurrent; are you able to elaborate on this? Thanks.
#7
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Joined APC: Jul 2017
Posts: 285
There are flight classes with the lab fee. Then the ground class with king schools program they monitor you. You register for both classes and they need to be taken in the same exact semester.
#8
Make sure it is something with which you can earn a living when the black swan, or a medical issue happens. Engineering, business, etc are good choices. General Liberal Arts studies and aviation do not afford a flexible impact for a black swan.
#9
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Joined APC: Nov 2016
Posts: 343
Question about Liberty.
if I transfer to LU with 37 gen ed credits from community college and the military, and then claim my CFII for 44 credits toward the Aviation major. When I finish the degree, would I be eligible for the 1250 RATP minimums?
if I transfer to LU with 37 gen ed credits from community college and the military, and then claim my CFII for 44 credits toward the Aviation major. When I finish the degree, would I be eligible for the 1250 RATP minimums?
#10
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Joined APC: Mar 2020
Posts: 399
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