UND is by no means perfect, last weekend here is a perfect example:
A UND student rents the Cadet at Flight Support. they fly to Fargo. they do something in fargo (eat is my guess) hop back in the plane and off they go back to GFK, 15 minutes later they have what they thought was an alternator failure, what do they do? TURN BACK TO FARGO, why in God's name would you not continue the next 20-25 minutes w/o electrical power and turn on the radios or heaven forbid get LIGHT GUN signals when back @ GFK? they do what UND says, turn back (or possibly ditch in a field, oh wait that isn't what they teach, but it has happened before) so the plane sat in Fargo all weekend and yesterday and when the mechanic in Fargo looks at it, his logbook entry says "could not duplicate problem". The mechanic at FLight Support thinks this person forgot to turn on the alternator switch, the people who flew the plane back also could not duplicate the problem. Another case of UND's safety bubble and not realism. i am not sure what happened to land ASApracticable at UND, but it sure doesn't seem to exist.
I think the program @ UND is a good one (as far as pilot factories go) but it doesn't teach real world aviation. I learned more in the limited amount of time i have flown away from the UND bubble about aviation than i ever did when i was student there.
I do think that the 112 course is a joke and should be on a case by case basis only. take a checkride at UND and see if you can live up to the standards(which in my experience are HIGHER) and if not make them do a FEW flights, then another test, but don't make them do a shortened version of the 102 course.
the 105 course actually does make sense to me if it is a true shortened course, review a few things, then cover what the student needs to pass the final stage
:insane::insane::insane: