If you don't need a degree to get hired at an airline, you don't need one to be a Capt.
Interesting, I curious to know about a college degree. Do you know if he is pursuing one now? I know I've seen job postings of reginols for an FO that only require a high school diploma, but I would imagine you need a degree to become a captain.
Yeah, no degree needed to be Captain. Now if he ever wants to move on to anything else lets hope he needs a degree for that.
Last I heard he was doing college online. I guess it works but I don't know how you get hook it up with a hot co-ed in her dorm room while being online? Not sure if you get those other college experiences either while online. To me college was more than books and exams.
To me, I hope college is only books and exams.
What is the point of going then? Go to football games, play sports, meet girls, guys, whatever. Join clubs, get a cool job while in college, ROTC? Be a TA.... Just whatever you do, don't buy your friends!
My advise - Live on campus in at least two different dorms. You will meet so many people like that.
Also, don't avoid a GF, you will regret it later on. Now avoiding getting married in college is probably a good idea.
I was a Resident Advisor in college and it opened me up to things and experiences I never thought I would see. Very interesting job to say the least and the cool thing is, room and board was free thus making college very affordable. It's not the tuition that gets you anymore, its the cost of living.
To me college was more than books and exams.
And that's great. . . but to some early professionals, college is only about the books and exams.
how sad![]()
Or it's a way to get jet PIC quickly (or quicker than the "traditional" routes), and they're willing to suffer just about anything (everything that's "wrong" with flying for a regional) to make that happen.
I will take a paycut if I leave my CFI job for a regional. (As will most, if not all, of my co-workers.) It's hard to believe that any 1st year FO will make more than his/her previous job. QOL is in the eye of the beholder. Your third point hits home for me.
This line of thought seems to permeate the industry these days. I don't get it.
1) Why is it so important to "get it quickly?"
2) Who is telling them that they must "get jet PIC quickly?"
Hopefully you are going to have a 20-30 year career. Why the hurry?
(Other than the schools that want their money...)
And I'm not asking hat in a mean way, either. SWA, UPS and FEDEX aren't going to hire everyone with TPIC. There aren't enough seats.
Besides the three above, what company would you want to work for, and why? Or are many really hoping for the three above? Maybe CAL? NetJets?
I don't think you are looking back far enough to accept the animosity. It's the working conditions that pilots accepted at those airlines that knocked the wind out of the better compensated airlines, or for professional piloting in general. Alot of pilots could not get hired by the better compensated airlines for one reason or another...so to get a job...they'd work for less. That's just how it goes....bitter, bitter, bitter animosity for those who've lost millions of dollars in compensation and retirement benefits to those who've gone to work for "substandard" benefits...and is reflected in the aforementioned piece of literature.
I disagree. It was the marketplace that knocked the wind out of the "better compensated airlines". People got tired of paying huge fares for lousy service. Southwest, JetBlue, and the Internet gave customers a choice, and they took it. In order to survive, the majors had to change the way they did business, hence the changes in the piloting profession that are causing so much bitterness.
The desire to make more than minimum wage is the largest reason why people leave the instructing world as quickly as possible. It has nothing to do with whether you're flying a jet or a turboprop, and since most entry level airlines fly regional jets then that's what the new-hires fly. SJS implies that pilots accept regional jobs(and the associated low wages) because they get the glamour of flying a new jet. That's BS. Pilots accept regional jobs because either 1) it pays significantly more money than their previous job, 2) it affords a better QOL than their previous job, or 3) it contains a base in a location that they wish to live in.