Acechris89
New Member
Hey everyone,
I've been studying for my CFI for the past few months. I was told by the school I plan to conduct the training with that it breaks down to about 30 hours of ground instruction and 15 hours of flight instruction (I understand these to be minimums). I decided that prior to starting the ground-school, I would do my best to study as much as possible, so that the ground portion goes as smoothly as possible. I also figured that it would be beneficial to get the writtens out of the way before the starting up the ground-school. It's my understanding that there are around three that I need to take (FOI, CFI, and BGI/AGI).
In hindsight, looking back on my college training, I would often direct a lot of my attention to the flight portion, and admittedly, a lot of knowledge preparation often felt like an afterthought. I feel like my classmates and I all had this approach as everyone seemed to get the required written tests done at the end of the course just prior to the checkrides.
I decided that this time around that kind of mentality is the wrong way to approach flight training and this rating especially. I've been studying almost non-stop for the past few months. With my learning style, I use a lot of flash-cards. I've also been condensing the info presented in the Flight Instructor's handbook into a typed outline format for a quick, direct, reference to what I read in the chapters. With all of the work I've done, I only have the first 2 out of the 9 chapters of the FOI understood and committed to memory.
With the nice weather approaching, I would love to start work on the rating sooner rather than later, but I'm a little frustrated with my progress. I know that I also need to account for the knowledge/regulations aspect of the oral, and haven't really touched upon that material in any great depth yet. I'm also studying out of the ASA Written Test-Prep and Oral Exam Guide(Which I understand to be just a guideline of the potential questions asked), and I'm expecting delivery of the Handbook of Aeronautical knowledge (I know it's free online, but I'm a prefer a tangible book to work out of).
Needless to say, I'm feeling a little overwhelmed by the amount of knowledge I'm expected to learn. The nice aspect of this rating is that since my graduation from my Part 141 collegiate flight program back in August, I decided to pursue the rating through a Part 61 flight school. Without having to worry about semester timelines, re-enroll fees, other classes and the like, I feel like I can focus exclusively on this rating alone.
Before I get too long-winded here, I just wanted to gauge the community perspective on this rating. What kind of studying techniques did you use? How did you go about studying for it? How was your checkride? Etc. Also, I received a flyer in the mail regarding an American Flyers CFI-A course. I don't live anywhere near one of there facilities, but I see that they offer an online course. I was thinking of getting it to supplement my study-sessions and to provide some structure, but I don't know much about it and I was wondering if anyone has tried it.
TL;DR-I'm just looking for advice on how to study for my CFI-A rating. I understand that the oral portion of the test is pretty lengthy and imagine that most people fail this aspect of the test.
Thanks for any help you can provide!
-Chris
I've been studying for my CFI for the past few months. I was told by the school I plan to conduct the training with that it breaks down to about 30 hours of ground instruction and 15 hours of flight instruction (I understand these to be minimums). I decided that prior to starting the ground-school, I would do my best to study as much as possible, so that the ground portion goes as smoothly as possible. I also figured that it would be beneficial to get the writtens out of the way before the starting up the ground-school. It's my understanding that there are around three that I need to take (FOI, CFI, and BGI/AGI).
In hindsight, looking back on my college training, I would often direct a lot of my attention to the flight portion, and admittedly, a lot of knowledge preparation often felt like an afterthought. I feel like my classmates and I all had this approach as everyone seemed to get the required written tests done at the end of the course just prior to the checkrides.
I decided that this time around that kind of mentality is the wrong way to approach flight training and this rating especially. I've been studying almost non-stop for the past few months. With my learning style, I use a lot of flash-cards. I've also been condensing the info presented in the Flight Instructor's handbook into a typed outline format for a quick, direct, reference to what I read in the chapters. With all of the work I've done, I only have the first 2 out of the 9 chapters of the FOI understood and committed to memory.
With the nice weather approaching, I would love to start work on the rating sooner rather than later, but I'm a little frustrated with my progress. I know that I also need to account for the knowledge/regulations aspect of the oral, and haven't really touched upon that material in any great depth yet. I'm also studying out of the ASA Written Test-Prep and Oral Exam Guide(Which I understand to be just a guideline of the potential questions asked), and I'm expecting delivery of the Handbook of Aeronautical knowledge (I know it's free online, but I'm a prefer a tangible book to work out of).
Needless to say, I'm feeling a little overwhelmed by the amount of knowledge I'm expected to learn. The nice aspect of this rating is that since my graduation from my Part 141 collegiate flight program back in August, I decided to pursue the rating through a Part 61 flight school. Without having to worry about semester timelines, re-enroll fees, other classes and the like, I feel like I can focus exclusively on this rating alone.
Before I get too long-winded here, I just wanted to gauge the community perspective on this rating. What kind of studying techniques did you use? How did you go about studying for it? How was your checkride? Etc. Also, I received a flyer in the mail regarding an American Flyers CFI-A course. I don't live anywhere near one of there facilities, but I see that they offer an online course. I was thinking of getting it to supplement my study-sessions and to provide some structure, but I don't know much about it and I was wondering if anyone has tried it.
TL;DR-I'm just looking for advice on how to study for my CFI-A rating. I understand that the oral portion of the test is pretty lengthy and imagine that most people fail this aspect of the test.
Thanks for any help you can provide!
-Chris