1. Did you go all the way through to your CFI, CFII and did you get your MEI? Would you recommend the MEI?
2. Would you recommend coming in with your PPL, and maybe any other ratings? Will the universities give you a hard time transitioning to their course? Will it make a difference in your bachelors degree if you get some of them somewhere else?
3. Since the CFI courses are optional at most universities, would you recommend taking them somewhere else, and would it be possible to instruct at the same college after that?
If you could give any feedback to these questions, that would be great.
Thanks.
1. I got my CFI and CFII at the university that I currently teach at , and my MEI at ATP. It can be hard to get a job where you will regularly use the MEI (for instance, at my university, generally only the assistant chiefs teach in the C310s). But it wouldn't hurt, and can be done for pretty cheap if you are proficient in twins already. (I did mine for $1800)
2. I would HIGHLY recommend coming in with AT LEAST your PPL, maybe more depending on what your university will do. I was a commercial ASEL/G with an instrument rating about the time I graduated high school. I am getting a Bachelors degree in Aviation Management now, and got something like 22 credits for all of my flying that I did in high school. I wasn't able to get our 2-year associates degree in 'flight' but I was given credit as if I had done all of the flight courses towards my elective requirements in aviation management, knocking pretty much a year off of my 4-year degree. Each university is different though, and whether you can get credit towards the 4-year or not will be highly variable. The only way that you can get the 2-year degree in aviation flight here is if you come in with only your PPL or nothing, and if you have your PPL, take our short AF199 course to 'standardize' you to the program...
3. The only reason that I did my CFI and CFII here was because I wanted to teach in the program. So I figured if I were a student here first (a totally different type of school than where I learned) that I would be able to teach more efficiently once I got the job. It also meant that I didn't need an interview for the part-time instructor spot that I am in now. The course I thought though was about 3 times as long as it needed to be for me personally, and generally all 141 CFI courses are really drawn out like that. Some people still can't pass the checkride at the end of the 22 week course, so take that however you want. If I did my CFI somewhere else, it would have been way quicker and cheaper, but a little bit harder to get the job, and maybe harder to transition to the job depending on where you are going to teach. I did my MEI at ATP in two days and loved it, and would recommend their CFI courses to anyone that doesn't need the information spoon fed to them and can study well unguided.
Basically, I am very happy with the way that I did things. I did my CFI courses my freshman year of my 4-year AVM program, and will be teaching 4 students full time for 4 semesters while I finish up my AVM degree, instead of going through the flight program. I will graduate (in 3 years) with about 1200/100 instead of 250/20 in 4 years. Any thing that you do before starting at pilot-mill university will help you in the long run. Having the experience somewhere other than the 141 environment will be a big help for you too, so that you have a little bit more perspective of what is going on.