Alp Kokoz
Filing Flight Plan
i agree with you shepard air is the best for writen exam...Shepherd air 100%
i agree with you shepard air is the best for writen exam...Shepherd air 100%
Welcome to PoA, Alp and congrats on making your first post. What other test prep methods for instrument did you try?i agree with you shepard air is the best for writen exam...
@Sudburian - Did you notice this thread topic is the INSTRUMENT written? I ask because you posted twice about PPL.
What, weather?Man, this test is a pain in the ass.
It’s a close second. I say that having taken and passed it twice. No way I was going to let it expire again.Personally, I think asking about the best way to study for the Instrument Written is like asking for the best way to have teeth pulled. Just my humble thoughts.
Personally, I think asking about the best way to study for the Instrument Written is like asking for the best way to have teeth pulled. Just my humble thoughts.
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I wonder if getting some time in the plane with CFII will help out?
I'm happy for you, but if the test is full of wrong answers and you scored 100% on it aren't you likely to be confused about which is which in the future?Just scored 100% on the instrument written.
I used Shepherd test prep for this, exclusively...
The test is so full of wrong answers...
I'm happy for you, but if the test is full of wrong answers and you scored 100% on it aren't you likely to be confused about which is which in the future?
About 90% of the stuff that's on the test I will never use in real life
I really hope you’re kidding.Of course not.
This is called studying for the test.
About 90% of the stuff that's on the test I will never use in real life, and I will never need to know in the way that it was asked. In one ear and out the other.
I recommend anybody studying for their instrument first focus on the written, get done with that, and then expunge most everything they learned about the test from their brain.
kidding
That’s why there’s an oral and practical test, but the base knowledge stems from written test.Let's just agree that multiple choice tests are just not the best way to understand if someone actually knows what they're doing or not.
You funny!In reality, everybody would look at the AFM supplement and clearly read out what their GPS is capable of.
Imo, the "key pieces" are too numerous to fit into a knowledge test, so I don't look at it the way you do. Instead, I see the test as a way to verify that an individual has studied widely enough and has retained most of it. Someone scoring 100%, in say only 60 key areas, doesn't know as much as someone who studied all the FAA's recommended resources and only retained 80% of it, imo. Not only that, but by memorizing "correct" answers that aren't really correct for the purpose of passing the test only encourages the FAA to make the tests harder still rather than fix the erroneous questions everybody would be missing if they hadn't all agreed with the incorrect answers. Thank you so much, Sheppard Air.I get why we need to have a knowledge test, to have some kind of grounding in the key pieces of knowledge that you would need...
Let's just agree that multiple choice tests are just not the best way to understand if someone actually knows what they're doing or not.
Thank you so much, Sheppard Air
I second that. I also scored 100 on the written using Sheppard. Aced the practical, too using things like - Studying the FAA publications (FAR/AIM, Instrument Flying Handbook, Instrument Procedures Handbook), Jeppesen instrument/comm textbook, the ASA IR practical study guide, my CFII....
Sheppard is one tool in the toolbox. For me it was, anyway. Not like people are going to just use Sheppard, take the written then go take the practical. For me, it got the written out of the way in short order so I could focus on the practical (the real learning). Guess it is different for everyone.
I don't know how long Kings is but I used both Sheppard Air and Sporty's IFR. Made it about 2/3rds of the way thru Sheppard then went thru the entirety of Sporty's IFR. Took the two practice quizzes in Sporty's then went and passed the written. In hindsight, Sheppards Air would have sufficed but I did like the video segments of Sporty's.....made things a bit easier to understand.Sportys website says 12 hours of IFR ground school video
anyone know how long king is? Aviation seminars?
Thanks
Anyone with experience with the Jeppesen online IFR course? Debating between Jeppesen and Ron Machado currently. Any thoughts on both are welcome.