Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Pilot shortage?????

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
All part of the 2012 hiring boom, by 2014 the college degree will no longer define who gets hired.

I agree it is going the way of vocational tech. Doesn't attract the talent/education it once commanded with the former higher pay.
 
I agree it is going the way of vocational tech. Doesn't attract the talent/education it once commanded with the former higher pay.
A college degree has nothing to do with talent in the cockpit. In fact it has little to do with talent in the marketplace. The college degree has become a pay your fee get a "B" at too many institutions to have the college degree by itself is not the ultimate proof of talent or education.
 
The college degree has become a pay your fee get a "B" at too many institutions to have the college degree by itself is not the ultimate proof of talent or education.

Not the ultimate proof, but a pretty reliable indicator of someone's overall competency. Heck, why even require a hs degree for that matter. It will always be a college degree at the more reputable of legacies.
 
Not the ultimate proof, but a pretty reliable indicator of someone's overall competency. Heck, why even require a hs degree for that matter. It will always be a college degree at the more reputable of legacies.
How about we have to write an ACT of 29 to get an ATP, that would certainly cut down the pilot ranks by testing for talent and intelligence.

In high schools, the vocational arts have all but vanished. We've elevated the importance of "higher education" to such a lofty perch that all other forms of knowledge are now labeled "alternative." Millions of parents and kids see apprenticeships and on-the-job-training opportunities as "vocational consolation prizes," best suited for those not cut out for a four-year degree.

And still, we talk about millions of "shovel ready" jobs for a society that doesn't encourage people to pick up a shovel. In a hundred different ways, we have slowly marginalized an entire category of critical professions, reshaping our expectations of a "good job" into something that no longer looks like work. A few years from now, an hour with a good plumber if you can find one is going to cost more than an hour with a good psychiatrist. At which point we'll all be in need of both.

Guys like my grandfathers with 8th grade educations are no less important to civilized life than they were 70 years ago. Maybe they're in short supply because we don't acknowledge them they way we used to. We leave our check on the kitchen counter, and hope the work gets done. That needs to change.

BTW You sound pretty cock sure of your elevated status and probably look down on those of us as the unwashed who do much match your lofty status. The legacies have hired without college degrees in the pilot shortages of 1999 and will do so again, by redefining competitive minimums. Is SWA a legacy? They were hiring non-college grads 4 years ago. Why because they were great guys who could fly an airplane. Maybe you will have boycott SWA if they offer you a job. I mean after all you would have to hang around people without a degree.
 
Last edited:
If we have any pilots without a four year degree, I would guess that it's less than one percent of a pilot group of over 6,000 (soon to be 7,700) pilots. I would probably play the percentages and get the degree, but that's just me YMMV.
 
If we have any pilots without a four year degree, I would guess that it's less than one percent of a pilot group of over 6,000 (soon to be 7,700) pilots. I would probably play the percentages and get the degree, but that's just me YMMV.
wasn't that way before 9-11

That is most likely the way a lazy HR person looks at it, the probability of college degree person being successful is higher than that of an high school drop out, therefore I will not look at anything in person's history except that box on page one in lower left hand corner.

There are so more ways to prove yourself beyond that simpleton degree than anyone who wants to pay their fee and get their “B” can obtain. For instance the graduate of a military flight training program, they are most likely superior to the college graduate even thought they do not have the paper, partially because they have been screened, unlike just having money and going to a college. This comes to mind and I am sure there are other examples
 
wasn't that way before 9-11

That is most likely the way a lazy HR person looks at it, the probability of college degree person being successful is higher than that of an high school drop out, therefore I will not look at anything in person's history except that box on page one in lower left hand corner.

There are so more ways to prove yourself beyond that simpleton degree than anyone who wants to pay their fee and get their “B” can obtain. For instance the graduate of a military flight training program, they are most likely superior to the college graduate even thought they do not have the paper, partially because they have been screened, unlike just having money and going to a college. This comes to mind and I am sure there are other examples

All pilots from the Air Force version of military flight training programs completed a four year degree before they were entered in the flight program.... Even so I do agree that it is an easy HR discriminator, whether or not it may be warranted.
 
All pilots from the Air Force version of military flight training programs completed a four year degree before they were entered in the flight program.... Even so I do agree that it is an easy HR discriminator, whether or not it may be warranted.
Probably the army is the only one taking non-4 yr degree guys, but back in the good ole days, we had a number of pilots flying in the Navy without degrees, called them NavCads. They were good pilots and many went on to jobs at the majors, DAL, Pam Am, Eal, etc.
 
wasn't that way before 9-11

That is most likely the way a lazy HR person looks at it, the probability of college degree person being successful is higher than that of an high school drop out, therefore I will not look at anything in person's history except that box on page one in lower left hand corner.

There are so more ways to prove yourself beyond that simpleton degree than anyone who wants to pay their fee and get their “B” can obtain. For instance the graduate of a military flight training program, they are most likely superior to the college graduate even thought they do not have the paper, partially because they have been screened, unlike just having money and going to a college. This comes to mind and I am sure there are other examples

Are you ever going to quit whining about the fact that degrees are the norm now? Get over it. There's no guarantee that someone with a degree is educated, but the chances that someone without a degree are educated are lower. Period. It is a hoop one must jump through in our society.

Hire who you want, but you should stop leading young people astray by recommending they not get a degree.
 
Last time I checked a good old boy from West Virginia named Yeager had no college degree, and as I remember he was a pretty fair pilot.....
 
Cool, it's settled.

If you're chuck Yeager, don't get a 4-Yr degree

Everyone else, get it done and do your work.

All settled now.
 
There's no guarantee that someone with a degree is educated
Thank you you get the picture. We all agree it has nothing to do with flying an airplane also. Also there is too much emphasis on college, the skilled trades go wanting, leaving jobs that often pay better than a liberal arts degree or an aviation management degree.

You can succeed in your aviation career without racking up a $100K in debt, unless of course you have rich parents who don't mind paying for it.

I have said never don’t get a degree, I have admitted that it will probably open doors, but it has nothing to do with flying an airplane. It is only a box to be checked on an application. Going to a 4 yr. college out of high school is not the only way to get your degree. This following example in the model of success in pursing flying job. We hired a 20 year old pilot a few years ago, 1 year of on-line college credit completed, started working the ramp pumping gas in high school, got hired hauling cargo in SA-227 as an F/O, at 18, got promoted to 208 Capt. at age 20, he has 1600 TT, 1100 MEL, 350 Turbine PIC, 1450 total turbine, he is started as a DA-20 F/O at $33K, he was a DA-20 Capt. the day he turned 23, he had his degree completed by the time he was 26 years old. At that time he should had 5200 TT, 4700 MEL, 5050 Turbine, 3200 hours 121 time, 1200 121 Turbo Jet PIC. He had his on-line BS degree in Aviation Management that our company helped pay for through the tuition assistance program, and no debt. He will be interviewing with the 4 or 5 year traditional college graduate for his first airline job. Which he was offered by a major, but turned it down for a Forture 5 Corporate job.
 
Thank you you get the picture. We all agree it has nothing to do with flying an airplane also.

Just like Fox news...you selectively quoted me. I said the degree is no guarantee someone is educated, but it is much more likely that someone with a degree is educated than someone without one.

No one thinks college makes you a better pilot. College makes you a better person to hire, which isn't about your pilot skills.



To the future pilots:

Yes, you can make more money as a welder. Go be a welder if you want money. If you want to be a pilot, get a college degree. Period. Get it after your certificates if you want, but you'll have MORE doors open with it. Even the idiot I copied above admits that.
 
Are you ever going to quit whining about the fact that degrees are the norm now? Get over it. There's no guarantee that someone with a degree is educated, but the chances that someone without a degree are educated are lower. Period. It is a hoop one must jump through in our society.

Hire who you want, but you should stop leading young people astray by recommending they not get a degree.

Exactamundo. I can't wait for some to throw out the fact that Bill Gates and Michael Dell were college dropouts. College is the new HS degree. One or two may slip through the legacy airline hiring cracks, but that's all.
Heck, when you think about it, you don't need a college degree to be an astronaut or President of the US.
Sounds like someone's kids couldn't get into college or someone was too cheap to pay. Wait, that gives me an idea. Sorry boys, your college fund is now Dad's coke and hooker bender in Vegas.
 
Exactamundo. I can't wait for some to throw out the fact that Bill Gates and Michael Dell were college dropouts. College is the new HS degree. One or two may slip through the legacy airline hiring cracks, but that's all.
Heck, when you think about it, you don't need a college degree to be an astronaut or President of the US.
Sounds like someone's kids couldn't get into college or someone was too cheap to pay. Wait, that gives me an idea. Sorry boys, your college fund is now Dad's coke and hooker bender in Vegas.

Gates and Dell, please, how about LeBron.
 
Even the idiot I copied above admits that.
Name calling? it just doesn't seem to be you, but then again this is FI! I have never said not to get a degree, just that a four year school right out of high school is not the only way to do it.
 
The gig is up yip- you're trying to sell the handful of college-averse pilots who will take that night school/online school route with you up in YIP- you get a motivated, cheap pilot who will be around quite a bit longer than most.... We get it- they can go that route if they wish- but we see the agenda you got.
Btw, college can also be an untradable, fantastic life experience if you make it one. Or it can be a box to check on an app. Your choice- I didn't go a traditional route right out of hs- but even with my CC stint I wouldn't trade any of my college experience for anything- much of which is a social education- how to work with people- how to talk to people- etc- etc-
It's made me a much better airline pilot-
IMO- my flying ability and experience got me interviews- who I am as a person, much of which was developed in college, got me jobs.

NEVER SKIMP ON YOUR TRAINING OR YOUR EDUCATION- THOSE HOLES WILL FOLLOW YOU AND HAMPER YOU THE REST OF YOUR LIFE-
 
Last edited:
Name calling? it just doesn't seem to be you, but then again this is FI! I have never said not to get a degree, just that a four year school right out of high school is not the only way to do it.

Sometimes you gotta call it like it is. I don't take well to being quoted in such a way to misrepresent what I'm saying.
 
Last time I checked a good old boy from West Virginia named Yeager had no college degree, and as I remember he was a pretty fair pilot.....


Watched The Right Stuff a few months ago. Wasn't Yeager passed up for the space program because he didn't have a degree? Guess it can cost anyone no matter who you are.
 

Latest posts

Latest resources

Back
Top