I'm 21 years old and been involved in aviation for a year or so. I've graduated from an FAA accredited maintenence training school, and currently working on getting my A&P, as well as currently working on my PPL. From there I want to get my CFI and CPL. Possibly move up to flying charter/corporate and I have little interest in ATP/Majors.
How well would I be treated by companies (how hire-able will I look) without a degree, but with an A&P. I've talked to people saying that people who hire for flying jobs LOVE A&P's, but what opinions do you guys have?
NOTE: I don't really have a huge understanding of the different levels of commercial aviation. As I understand it, it goes CFI/Charters, Regionals, Majors?
Thanks for your insight and help
So your question is...? Get the degree vs. the A+P? If you want to stay in the A+P world, the degree is not important, obviously. If you want to eventually get to the Majors, it is. There are not a whole lot of places where you can do both A+P work, and fly, and have any type of long term job/location stability, there are a few, but they may not be where you live right now, so you may have to move to find one. How's the little lady feel about that?
Here's something to think about, right now you are pretty young to be making "Forever" type, long term plans, unless you really, really, really, love this girl and you both don't ever want to leave your home town. A lot of "stuff" (good and bad) is going to happen to you/her between now and 5, 10, 15 years from now, so be flexible or be miserable.
To answer your first question, yes, I would think most small charter/135/etc. type ops would value the A+P over the degree, and they might even let you fly their airplanes once in a while. I had a very close friend in high school who did just that for a few years when he was your age. BUT, doing both, he decided he liked the flying part better, so he left there for a steady job flying cancelled checks at night, then to a Regional, then on to American Airlnes, where he is today a 767 ER Captain flying to Paris out of Chicago. Oh, first he did get a 4yr. degree from Parks college while also getting his A+P and CFI.
He and his high school sweet heart broke up when he moved to Chicago, he later married an AA Flight Attendant and they have two beautiful daughters, (both at TCU today if any of you young studs are looking for love).
I broke up with my highschool sweetheart when I joined the Air Guard and went to Del Rio, Texas for a year. Actually she dumped me, the day before I was going to propose to her, because she couldn't handle the long distance relationship thing. Also at that time, I said I never wanted to live in a house with a white pickett fence or have kids. I wanted to live on a sailboat in the Keys and fly out of MIA. I really wanted to be Jimmy Buffett but he got there first. (that Prick!)
When I got home from UPT 18mo. later, she wanted to get back together. I said NFW, by then I'd seen too many other fish in the sea! 3 years later I married a Delta Flight Attendant and we live in a house, and we have 4 kids. So much for long term plans! The oldest two are twin daughters at Auburn if any of you young studs up that way would be so kind as to take them -both- (a pilot special, two for the price of one!) off my payroll.
The Moral of the Story? At 21 I had no idea what was actually going to happen in my life, long term. At age 51 I still don't but with me, Flying always came first, ahead of women, or job location. I chased that dream and it worked out ok, eventually. One thing they told us newb pilots in the Air Force, "Flexibility is the key to Air Power, now bend over..."