Check_Six
Well-Known Member
BEWARE of FlightSafety: I was a student there and had a very difficult time getting my instrument rating there. The Seminole was just to fast for me to catch on to. I suggested doing my rating in one of their instrument rated single engines and they refused. The result was incompleted flights and review boards (actually taking my money), then one day I had a meeting w/Mr. Skovgard (the director) and he terminated my training. Thats right, after spending $80,000 I got kicked out of school. Its not that I was a slacker or anything, I really studied and tried hard. I NEVER missed a lesson or was unprepared for a flight. Its just that I didn't "fit" into the FS way of doing things and they told me to leave. Do I feel it was very unprofessional? Yes. Do I feel like FS did all they could have to help me, a struggling student? NO. Would I recommend FS to anyone? NO WAY. If you don't fit into their "cookie cutter" way of teaching, then you dont belong there. I wish I knew this $80,000 ago. I should have bought my own airplane and hired my own instructor instead of throwing it away at FS. Oh well such is life. If they dont want my money, someone else will...afterall I have enough of it!!!!
Seriously...stop whining.
FSA isn't for everyone, bud. When I arrived there that fact was made clear both by my instructor and in the fine print. I'm sure if you'd bothered to do a little research you'd have found that it is not Safety's job to spoon feed you through the program. The issue of getting "yellow-sheeted" for incomplete flights and facing the review board is FSA's way of deciding (on a case-by-case basis) whether or not it's a waste of their time and your money to keep you in the program. Skovgaard probably did you a favor by cutting you loose. Do you honestly think that the airlines aren't going to expect you to meet their requirements and operate per their "cookie cutter" standards? If you can't, they'll find someone who will. FSA training is similar to the airlines in that regard...hard work and studying isn't everything. You have to meet the STANDARDS. The program and the standards are preset and I doubt that you spent $80,000 there without even making it past the Instrument Rating (a.k.a. Step IV a/b). I'm sorry if the Seminole is to fast for ya'...but that makes it evident that another school or method of training will be better for you as an individual.
I'm not saying that FSA is perfect, but you need to take a hard look at yourself before ripping on a program that has been successfully producing pilots for years. (And BTW, I'm not affiliated with FSA other than being a grad, so this isn't a company man giving you any kind of party line.)