ahmad
Pre-takeoff checklist
This is from Sheppard. How stupid is this question and answer? The real answer is 36 minutes and 10 gals but if you want to get credit for the answer you must choose the wrong answer. WTH
Chortle. it's been done. The Instrument test has always had questions that were scored wrong, were unanswerable (with the information provided), and generally the sign of the fact that they are poorly prepared and unproofread.If Shepard believes this question actually exists and is erroneous, they should be contacting AFS-630 about it.
Why would they take writing test questions seriously when applicants don’t take the test seriously?Chortle. it's been done. The Instrument test has always had questions that were scored wrong, were unanswerable (with the information provided), and generally the sign of the fact that they are poorly prepared and unproofread.
Why would they take writing test questions seriously when applicants don’t take the test seriously?
Perhaps. Maybe getting that fixed should be the emphasis. Especially if the only way people are going to actually learn the material is by preparing for a test on the material.Perhaps it's the other way around. The tests are so irrelevant and awful, that nobody takes them serious as they are purely an artificial impedeiment and neither measuring the necessary or sufficient ability of the student to get the sought after certificate/rating.
Take some other government agencies that have industry people working on the testing pools: you get the examining organizations (really should be more than one, don't get me started on that) and these people like Gleim, Kings, Shepperd, etc... to collaborate on the actual tests.
If Shepard believes this question actually exists and is erroneous, they should be contacting AFS-630 about it.
Here’s the problem. Sheppard (or their client) has no way of knowing if any given question is scored correctly or not. They rely on eyewitness feedback by someone who gets a sheet that shows an ACS knowledge area deficiency.
They also have zero ability to discern which answer is being scored correctly, for the same reason.
Unless they are buying data directly from PSI and PSI is violating their contract with the FAA.
Some good points here.Perhaps it's the other way around. The tests are so irrelevant and awful, that nobody takes them serious as they are purely an artificial impedeiment and neither measuring the necessary or sufficient ability of the student to get the sought after certificate/rating.
As long as you have DPEs with their own ideas of what’s important and/or pencil whipping certificates, the written serves as the only standardized assessment that the 61.xxx knowledge requirements have been met.…So does the knowledge exam, aka the written, still have a place?
What makes you think this question is actually in the FAA question bank? Perhaps it was 20 years ago when they started doing this, but I can assure you the test has evolved and test prep companies haven't. The FAA doesn't report when they toss out questions, so how would Shepard know?This is from Sheppard. How stupid is this question and answer? The real answer is 36 minutes and 10 gals but if you want to get credit for the answer you must choose the wrong answer. WTH
You have to understand that these are the people who wrote Several pages on Wench Launching.You'd think a test like that would have been proof read a few times before being published.
The FAA doesn't report when they toss out questions.
Learn the material. It's the ultimate cheat code.
The written requires you to know the difference between a trebuchet, a catapult and a ballista for launches, and which is better for solid payload vs hot oil or tar.You have to understand that these are the people who wrote Several pages on Wench Launching.
Some of these test prep companies include flight planning questions that I suspect were scrubbed years ago. Since flight planning is not going anywhere, there's no way for testing providers to get feedback on when they've gone away. It's not as though test takers are reporting back when they've gotten or question or when they haven't.Up until very recently, the FAA did report when they tossed out questions - well not the actual questions, but classes of questions and topics. For example, they reported when they dropped all of the ADF questions. This was done in document that the Airman Testing Branch published called "What's New". Sadly, they have stopped publishing it.
But yes, learning is the ultimate cheat code.
Learn the material. It's the ultimate cheat code.
There’s a pervasive belief that knowledge testing is somehow flawed and the only way to pass is to memorize answers because working the problem will result in an answer that will be scored as wrong. Whatever truth to that has long since passed and the people passing these beliefs haven’t actually taken a knowledge test quite some time…in some cases decades.Thank you for saying that. I am in total agreement and have always asserted that for the same effort it takes to memorize a bunch of stuff, one could have learned and understood the subject matter to score a decent pass on the test. And be ready for the oral. Folks who merely memorize still will have to learn everything (for real) for the oral.
But it seems most of the recent batch of instructors were brought up the memorization ladder and coach their students to do the same.
Um…if you didn’t recognize what the questions were about, how could you answer them correctly?I got a 97% on my instrument written. The two questions I got "wrong" were coded as Icing. There were no questions about icing on my exam. Making sense of the exam is impossible.
So you're say is that the puck didn't go from your own side of the center red line down past the goal line of the opposing side...The two questions I got "wrong" were coded as Icing
... and the people passing these beliefs haven’t actually taken a knowledge test quite some time…in some cases decades.
Not so sure about that. I'm surrounded by a large community of young and recently new flight instructors who unabashedly say out loud that the best strategy is to get into a program that helps memorizing answers.
But they learned that from their instructors, who learned that from thei instructors, who learned from their instructors....Not so sure about that. I'm surrounded by a large community of young and recently new flight instructors who unabashedly say out loud that the best strategy is to get into a program that helps memorizing answers.
What? You didn't care to do a W&B on a 727? And how about that critical knowledge like how many stewardesses are needed on flight with 24 passengers?But they learned that from their instructors, who learned that from thei instructors, who learned from their instructors....
I'll be the first to admit that the old (i.e. pre 2014) ATP knowledge test was crap. For most folks, that was the last knowledge test they took. So that sentiment carried on, and got passed on to generations of pilots. I totally understood the reasoning for Shepard for the old ATP, but I never understood it for some of the other knowledge tests like instrument or commercial.
And how about that critical knowledge like how many stewardesses are needed on flight with 24 passengers?
Yeah, but the FAA has numerical superiority.So you're say is that the puck didn't go from your own side of the center red line down past the goal line of the opposing side...
F
I have no doubt the original question posted here has been reported numerous times to the FAA already by those authoring test prep content. From what I've seen, these dubious questions/answers can linger for a long time before they get corrected. One would think now that there is a single company administering the tests, and that it is 100% computerized, that amendments would be made quicker, but alas...
Answer: One