One, I simply did not have enough mental capacity to do flight training, and do well at work, and study for the written and do all other life things. Make studying your number one priority for the foreseeable future and start flight training after you’ve passed the written. #2 Start by getting your written out of the way before starting flight training This way you can mitigate the costs of study material. Also, be sure to ask around at your local airport, there might be pilots who would like to lend you their study material or a login to an online course. You can find these in the “Free Resources” section here on this website. By picking early on, you’ll prevent getting overwhelmed by all the various ways you can consume the information.ĭon’t forget that there are also the free FAA publications that you can download: The Pilots Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge, Airplane Flying handbook, Instrument Flying Handbook, AIM, and a few more. Less is more in this case, since all the information is basically the same but presented in a slightly different way. I would recommend to find one ground school course that you want to use and in addition one FAA written test prep publication. Some examples are: King Schools, Jeppesen, Sportys, American Flyers, MzeroA, Gleim, ASA, AOPA and many more. There’s a whole bunch of study material, books, online test prep, online ground school material, etc. #1 Decide what study material you want to go with and stick with that Don’t find the time, MAKE the time to study.Start by getting your written out of the way before starting flight training.Decide what study material you want to go with and stick with that.Below you’ll find 5 strategies that helped me accomplish this and I hope that it will help you to succeed as well. I started my flight training while working a demanding job as a flight test engineer, and still managed to pass all my written exams the first time. Most of us have a family, job, school work, life/adulting in general to deal with, which leaves limited time to concentrate on your FAA written exam. If your goal is to become a pilot, you’re going to have to do a lot of studying, there’s no way around it.
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