CFIT99
because of the implication...
I would contest that you don't develop a correlative understanding of the majority of what you learn in ground school until you actually start flying on the line. For instance, you are required to know all of the icing limitations and procedures in training but its just a bunch of rote memorization until you actually start dealing with real icing in the airplane and the numbers really mean something.
I agree that training isn't that bad as long as you do the required reading and studying, but it would make it easier if you had already seen the material before heading up to Appleton. The information would be less overwhelming - more like drinking from a garden hose than a fire hose. If you have some free time now I say why not get a head start?
I've heard both sides...some pilots saying, don't worry about it till training they want to train you how they want to train you. BUT I also heard the other side...from actual check airmen saying; learn some of the memorization items, that isn't procedure just learn the numbers plus glance through it so it doesn't look extremely foreign when in ground.
either way very excited to get started...