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Auburn

  • Thread starter Thread starter larry
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larry

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 5, 2002
Posts
90
Anybody at the Auburn University flight school?

I had a buddy there a year ago and at the time instructors got paid a salary, which is nice, you get paid even if it rains for a week.

The down side was the school was run by a lady named Terry that was apparently not too pleasant to work for and the Instructors got no multi time at all.

Thanks...
 
roll tide!!

don't waste your time or money. get your ratings on your own, and a get a degree in something other than aviation. bottom line, when you graduate, you'll be qualified to be a ..... drum roll.......... flight instructor!!!! the school owns a citation, at least one king air, and had purchased/aquired a dc-10 sim some years ago. you'd think that a school that owns some advanced equipment would be able to crank out graduates with some respectable credentials. but at last check the sim was in a warehouse, and they were advertising outside of the school for a citation sic. another negative, at least a few years ago, was what appeared to be a lack of coordination between the flight school (at the airport), and the university. the command structure was never clear to me. unity of command is one of the key principles of generalship, and at the time, neither col. johnson or ms. paulk displayed a visible command of this concept.

another thing that sucked is that the aviation management program was under the authority of the school of engineering. this may have changed in recent years. if so, i always thought that aviation/airline/transportation management was better suited to the business school.

on the plus side, auburn is a nice town, and a fun place to live, and is full of good looking women. all i can say is that they do it right in alabama. i guess a certain amount of inbreeding has positive side-effects. just kidding. seriously, after two years there, i had an instrument rating and 50 hours in my log book that i didn't have when i showed up. a year after leaving, i was a cfii/me with almost a thousand hours, just working with my home town fbo. i finished my degree last year with the erau dl program, and now am flying for a company that owns several piston twins. i am not yet an airline captain, but i feel like i am closer to my long range goals now, than i would be had i stayed with the babes in auburn. just my .02 worth.

lamont
 
Last edited:
auburn

Thanks for the info, I'm not looking for a place to get ratings, I'm looking for a place to work.

I've got a degree and my CFII/MEI so I'm only interested in Auburn because its salaried, close to home and connected to some regional airlines.

I get to quit this lousy deskjob in April and try to start in aviation full time, but its looking like the local FBO is going to be my only option. I was hoping to find a place that wasn't a dead end and had some corporate/charter/airline connections so I had a place to move up to.

I've been waiting for a 3 years to get out of the computer business, my wife graduates college in April and I'll get my chance. Ever notice how slowly things go by when you are waiting!
 
I went to Auburn for 4 quarters. I had a terrible experience with the instructors there and especially Terry. I was told that my previous training was not good enough and that I needed to repeat some of my commercial training just because i did not have "auburn" training . I was told that I might be able to get some multi students after about 3 years there....And even though i met the rental requirement for their aircraft, a check out would not do...They wanted me to do 15 hours in type before i could rent a 172RG. The ground schools were horrible. Instructors would not admit a mistake, even when I quoted from the AIM, I was told that the AIM was outdated (it was a current FAR/AIM)when i left, they said that my freight job would lead me nowhere unless I had an aviation degree from AU. I laughed and left. I hope they are still enjoying instructing. (just a little bitter) I found that they were very hostile to instructors that did not train at auburn... there are many other flight schools that pay a lot better than AU. PM me if you want some flight schools addresses. on the positive side, Col. Johnson was the best...I have nothing but good things to say about that man. too bad he doesnt run the airport.
 
agreed

d328pilot said:
on the positive side, Col. Johnson was the best...I have nothing but good things to say about that man. too bad he doesnt run the airport.

agreed. flight school would be much better under the control of col. j. anybody remember that little napoleon guy that used to be terry's helper, jason mor... mon? what ever happened to him?
 
Anybody have current experience with the program? I was hoping to start my private their next fall. Do they even offer part 61 training?
 
I graduated from Auburn in the early nineties and was quite happy with the program. I flight instructed for AU my last year and was hired by DAL at age 28. I know about 40 other guys who graduated who were within a couple of years of me that were also hired by majors in their mid to late twenties. US news and World Report lists AU as one of the top 50 public institutions in the U.S. and sorry Bama fans, you are nowhere near! Things may have changed in the past eight years but, the aviation program is definately in the business school and looked upon quite favorably by both ASA and DAL.
 
Jason Mohrman is now an ERJ-145 captain at Continental Express based in Newark. Terry is no longer the chief down there and some good people still work there. I saw some of what has been said in the previous posts when I was down there. I pumped gas for over a year at the airport before finally being hired as a CFI. Back then a few of us got time in the 2 King Airs. Now they have 2 brand new Citations but do not allow instructors to fly as SIC for one reason or another. I graduated several years ago and have not been back for a while but keep up with others who live there during football season.

All in all, I enjoyed my experience there and will second the comments about Col. Johnson. He is a nice guy. The university is wonderful and the town is great. Aviation has moved under the Business department and the airport is under new management. I see foreward looking people in the big positions now so the future looks bright. They still have a backlog from what I've been told of students so more planes and instructors are probably needed. Good luck in the job hunt.

By the way, I work with Jason Mohrman and he is a nice guy but the napoleon comment had me laughing pretty hard. I've got to tell him to read this.

IAHERJ
 
Ancient history, but....

In 1987 I went out to AUO to explore getting checked out in that Tobago they had back then. A full-time instructor came out and was very rude to me - told me I needed a minimum 1 hour check out for local flying, and another 1 hour minimum checkride for cross-country. I couldn't afford it and so I went on down to Tuskegee. Lori Love flew with me in her 182 for about .6, and signed me off for her 172's and 152's at the same time. I ended up renting from her for the rest of the time I was in school.

I don't carry grudges, do I?
 

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