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- Aug 13, 2007
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Bob Gardner
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.
Using the private test as an example, the FAA lists eleven references with which an applicant for a plain-vanilla airplane pilot certificate is supposed to be familiar; one such reference is FARs 1, 61, 43, 71 and 91. All by itself that is a heck of a lot of information. The test writers assume that applicants have read all of these references and that any questions on their content are fair game. Do you seriously think that an oral exam can cover all of this ground? The deep thinkers behind test preparation know that if you look up or come across one tidbit of information you will become aware of additional information on the same page and just might learn something new in the process. That's why rote memorization does not create knowledgeable pilots....all they know are the answers to specific questions.
I have often suggested that applicants and certificated pilots take a copy of the FAR/AIM into a quiet room in their homes, a well-lit place where they will be uninterrupted as they sit and open the book to any page at random and learn new things. I'm sure that you have such a room in your home.
Bob