Really? What didn’t you like about it?Hated Gleim PPL course with a passion.
Some products are written test preps and some are ground schools.There's a lot out there, King, Sporty's, Jeppesen, Gleim, and a host of others. Are there any significant differences? Any that you particularly liked or disliked?
Absolutely true. For written test prep, it's mostly about drill and recognition. The only thing which probably matters most is which one you can stand to work with,Some products are written test preps and some are ground schools.
Serious question. Are you trying to pass the written or learn the material? If the former than Sheppard Air. If the latter I like Sporty’s nowadays. I think you will find many use both methods.
Of course grab a copy of the pilots handbook from the FAA. It really is good and makes a great reference later on.
Gold seal's web site is: groundschool dot com. Just private for now; instrument "Late Fall 2022".Current crop of students are using @write-stuff ’s Gold Seal system (www.onlinegroundschool.com) and are doing well.
But, any of the digital ground school solutions are best done with guidance, support, and interaction with the flight instructor to aid in making the lessons stick in your brain that much better. And to make sequential sense.
Do look at the training course outline material to see what order for reading of FAA material and which videos to watch.
I went with Gold Seal, I think I got a lot for my money.There's a lot out there, King, Sporty's, Jeppesen, Gleim, and a host of others. Are there any significant differences? Any that you particularly liked or disliked?
I felt it would be less painful to stick a fork in my eye than re-watch those PPL weather videos (the guy who narrates them specializes in putting people to sleep)