Why not just learn the material and pass the test?Use Sheppard Air and follow their plan. It works and will get you pass the FAA written. Then actually learn the material.
When is the last time you took the instrument knowledge test?Ideally Sheppard and other sources to have a full understanding… but I used only Sheppard and if you follow it, it works very well.
The written has poor questions and poorly worded questions. My experience is that Sheppard alone would yield a high score for most people.
When is the last time you took the instrument written knowledge test?
How were the questions poorly written or worded? I'm genuinely curious, because it's been about two decades since I've taken mine. In the mean time, as part of the shift from PTS to ACS, there has been a huge effort to overhaul questions, remove obsolete and poorly written questions, and update the knowledge test supplement. Further, there's been an effort to shift from rote knowledge memorization regurgitation to scenario based questions.Spring of 2021.
How were the questions poorly written or worded? I'm genuinely curious, because it's been about two decades since I've taken mine. In the mean time, as part of the shift from PTS to ACS, there has been a huge effort to overhaul questions, remove obsolete and poorly written questions, and update the knowledge test supplement. Further, there's been an effort to shift from rote knowledge memorization regurgitation to scenario based questions.
How were the questions poorly written or worded? I'm genuinely curious, because it's been about two decades since I've taken mine. In the mean time, as part of the shift from PTS to ACS, there has been a huge effort to overhaul questions, remove obsolete and poorly written questions, and update the knowledge test supplement. Further, there's been an effort to shift from rote knowledge memorization regurgitation to scenario based questions.
FOLLOW Sheppard's study plan for their program. It works! I got a 98% on my IFR
If only Sheppard would enter into the 90s and allow sign up or renewal via the internet
So I spent to $45 just see Sheppard Air’s product for IRA. As of last night, there’s 1,117 questions in the test bank. Caveating with I don’ know whether the FAA subscribe’s Bloom’s Taxonomy as part of their Instructional Systems Design philosophy, it appears many of the questions in the bank can only be rote memorization.
For example, there were several questions that all could only be answered by knowing the definition of MOCA and whether the signal coverage is in SM or NM. Another example was along the lines of you’re on the FAC and see a blue flashing light and hear dashes on the radio, which marker beacon did you pass?
In Bloom’s world, that is at the bottom of pyramid as either a Knowledge (original taxonomy) or Remember (revised, 2001) category. That category targets an outcome of recalling specifics or universals, methods and processes, patterns, structures, or settings.
In the knowledge component of every single IRA ACS task, the learning objective states “The applicant demonstrates understanding of:…”
Understanding is the next rung up the taxonomy and equates to an outcome where the individual knows what is being communicated and can make use of it without having to relate it to other concepts or in it’s fullest implication. Action verbs associated with these type questions would be interpret, classify, summarize, infer, compare, explain, and synonyms.
Some of the questions around see the HSI, select it’s relationship to the aircraft location relative to a VOR do well at that. The rote memorization of MOCA or marker beacons, not so much. Better questions would be scenario based, but harder to write and longer to read which adds up over the 60 questions and 180 mins available as there are industry standards that guide a test maker’s time/speed/distance problem.
The other challenge I see appears to be re-use of the question bank and supplement among most, if not all, other written exams. That leads to a quest of efficiency for the question writers while diluting the learning experience as a whole.
I think reality is the entire knowledge component segment, from ground schools to test prep to written exam has been nothing but a block-checking exercise from an adult learning standpoint. There are better ways for an applicant to demonstrate knowledge transfer and retention. One example is a combo open book/closed book exam that have different number of questions and different minimum acceptable performance scores.
Thanks, I'm familiar with their policy. I was one of the last few folks to take their ATP written prep in 2014 right before the ATP knowledge test was re-vamped (and the ATP-CTP in August 2014.Brad, this isn't an argument to your point because you are not wrong about FAA not making questions known to the public. Just want to call one thing out about the Sheppard system - I think Sheppard is able to keep their test question bank up-to-date by relying on the test-takers themselves. They have some kind of guarantee that if you see a question on the test you have never seen in the Sheppard question bank, you memorize the question and all possible answers. Then, once you are done with the test you immediately write that information down and/or call Sheppard to report the new question. It seems to work, because I don't think I had a question on the IR or Comm written I hadn't seen (many many many many many) times using the Sheppard system.
It annoys me because I always want to sign up late at night or on a weekend. Never 9-5 weekdays. So I’ve never used them.Same. Used Sheppard to drill-n-kill the written. Took two weeks of pretty intense, focused studying and following their system to the letter, but it resulted in a 98%. I forget which question I missed. As mentioned above - you have to follow the Sheppard system to the letter. Don't try to invent your own study system using the Sheppard questions/answers. Follow. Their. System. To. The. Letter. You will pass with a high score. You will also never want to study another IR question again in your life after the intense study system is over.
Yeah, what's with that? I used them for my commercial written, too (100%, thanks Sheppard)... and thought maybe they would have updated their site... nope. Like something you would see on the internet wayback machine.
I should have been more clear when referencing between the two different question banks.…
I'll also mention not to confuse what questions are in the actual test banks versus what questions are in the various test prep databases...
The problem is is there is no simple mechanism for Shepard to remove questions from their bank that are no longer used by the FAA. Sure, they can add new questions, but I'm not sure there is any reward for verifying that a question is still in the bank. They would have to pull out questions that never got verification; something I don't think they do.
This encourages negative knowledge transfer and disappoints me both in both the FAA and Sheppard.… the various "gotcha" questions are (e.g. the ones that score wrong answers correctly or have multiple correct answers)…
Good point good point. So their question bank just grows and grows with no pruning of deprecated questions. so I probably studied a lot more than I needed to... no wonder my head hurt for days after taking those writtens.
And this is why we can’t have nice things. The FAA has zero vested interest in an airman passing a test of any type, be it medical, knowledge, or practical. It’s counter to providing the safest, most efficient aerospace system in the world.… I mean, it is in their best interest to convince us test takers that the FAA question bank is downright draconian, lest we just use the FAA available materials and self study...
Why not just learn the material and pass the test?
Wanted to come back to this as I play with the Sheppard Air product. One criticism I have keeps popping up in their explanations is the use of outdated references. For example, a question pertaining to Convective Outlook Charts references AC 00-45E - Aviation Weather Services. The current version of that AC is H and is dated 2016....I'll also mention not to confuse what questions are in the actual test banks versus what questions are in the various test prep databases. The FAA frequently gets queries about questions that still live on in the test prep banks but are no longer in the official FAA test bank. The FAA does not make the official question bank public so the only way to know if a question exists is to get it in a real test.
Wanted to come back to this as I play with the Sheppard Air product. One criticism I have keeps popping up in their explanations is the use of outdated references. For example, a question pertaining to Convective Outlook Charts references AC 00-45E - Aviation Weather Services. The current version of that AC is H and is dated 2016.
Hopefully the FAA test bank isn't using the question Sheppard is because there are some differences between the reference versions on this particular topic.
Sheppard repeatedly said follow their answers, even when wrong...