Since the FAA has decided DPE''s need to hit on everything in the ACS, like looooooong orals covering much of the info in the written, do you think testing an applicant face-to-face during the checkride is much more effective than taking a written test where many of the questions are out there in one form or another? Just curious as to what others think.
Since that's NOT what the FAA intended, and says so in their monthly seminars about the ACS... the premise of the question is busted.
Highly recommend you attend one online. Free, and informative. I attended in a pair of shorts with my feet up on my deck railing on a wifi iPad last spring. Tech worked great. They're still offering them, AFAIK.
All an oral exam does is test your ability to articulate your understanding, which some people aren't good at. I'd like to see the ground portion of the exam concentrate on reviewing your proposed flight plan, and why you made the planning decisions you made. Then take the time you saved by not having that ridiculous oral and use it for the flight portion, which is the only thing that really cannot be tested any other way.
Of course, nothing like this will ever happen. Perhaps instead of privatizing ATC, we should be privatizing pilot training AND testing, and get the FAA out of it.
If scenario based orals aren't what's happening in your local area, something's wrong at your FSDO and with your DPEs. The direct word from the aforementioned seminars from the makers of the ACS itself, say so.
I'll happily report that at least two local DPEs here are doing It right. Build the right scenarios and covering all the items in the ACS isn't all that hard, it's just a list of stuff folks do and know on every flight. And even then, not all of what they know and do... it's a MINIMUM standard, as Doc Bruce would say.
I was pretty impressed with my Commercial and Initial CFI orals and have heard the Private oral plan at least one area DPE shoots for. His scenarios are impressive because he WORKED on them. He covers the entire ACS without the applicant feeling like he's working through a checklist of items by making those items things you'd need to know to accomplish the given scenario and flight. He also bases those scenarios off of a starting flight plan that is the applicant's.
A simple example. Applicant is told to plan a flight. They discuss that plan. Examiner then says, "Weather along the route of flight has changed. Here's a sheet with some of the METARs and TAFs. Tell me what you think and what you'd do."
Scenarios done right with open-needed questions and a savvy examiner cover the ACS items just fine. Often a pile of them in a single scenario change. It is on the examiner to do it the prescribed way, however, and not just read down a list of items.
Glad we have some here who get that. Good folks. Work hard. Make some serious bucks, too, but I'm okay with that. They're not just sitting around between exams eating bon-bonds on the couch. I could see where if some are, they wouldn't be up to speed yet on scenario based examinations, and ACS has been out plenty long that they should have done the prep work for that by now.