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Today I finished and passed virtual basics. For all of you still waiting, I have a quick word of advice, that i personally would have liked to have known ahead of time.
I had 0 formal aviation knowledge going into this. From lurking this site, to watching aviation videos and channels on YouTube, some info of course trickled into my brain the past year. But all I truly knew ahead of time was my phonetic alphabet and Zulu time, not exactly a giant milestone.
As such, there were some days in Basics that I felt completely out of my element. Sometimes I wouldnt bother asking a question because I simply had no context on what was what, I was lost and the only answer was time (later) reading and re-reading the material. Some lessons are far more intuitive because of the subject matter. Some will require pure memorization. It wasnt until about day 3 that I realized I was going to be taking A LOT of notes. This was also the day I realized that virtual learning is not my strong suit because I'm very much used to being in person, I find it easier to concentrate and absorb info that way. I havent been in a classroom since 2015 and that was trade school, far easier. All in all, I underestimated the situation going in.
So, in hindsight I would have done this instead: started taking detailed notes in a single binder on day one. I'd spend more time reading the material after class, and not just during the time allotted in class (which there is plenty). And I would have used the last few months to introduce myself to aviation terms, items, equipment and procedures just to break the ice. Dont try to "learn" something in detail, just get your beak wet. In less than a month's time, there was a ton of subject matter I had to be introduced to, digest, learn, and memorize. That's not easy imho. It's nowhere near impossible, but looking back, that's really where my only stress was: "I'm trying so hard to learn brand new info this week that I'm forgetting the brand new info I learned last week that I was finally getting a grasp on."
That's all I got, goodluck and godspeed everyone.
I had 0 formal aviation knowledge going into this. From lurking this site, to watching aviation videos and channels on YouTube, some info of course trickled into my brain the past year. But all I truly knew ahead of time was my phonetic alphabet and Zulu time, not exactly a giant milestone.
As such, there were some days in Basics that I felt completely out of my element. Sometimes I wouldnt bother asking a question because I simply had no context on what was what, I was lost and the only answer was time (later) reading and re-reading the material. Some lessons are far more intuitive because of the subject matter. Some will require pure memorization. It wasnt until about day 3 that I realized I was going to be taking A LOT of notes. This was also the day I realized that virtual learning is not my strong suit because I'm very much used to being in person, I find it easier to concentrate and absorb info that way. I havent been in a classroom since 2015 and that was trade school, far easier. All in all, I underestimated the situation going in.
So, in hindsight I would have done this instead: started taking detailed notes in a single binder on day one. I'd spend more time reading the material after class, and not just during the time allotted in class (which there is plenty). And I would have used the last few months to introduce myself to aviation terms, items, equipment and procedures just to break the ice. Dont try to "learn" something in detail, just get your beak wet. In less than a month's time, there was a ton of subject matter I had to be introduced to, digest, learn, and memorize. That's not easy imho. It's nowhere near impossible, but looking back, that's really where my only stress was: "I'm trying so hard to learn brand new info this week that I'm forgetting the brand new info I learned last week that I was finally getting a grasp on."
That's all I got, goodluck and godspeed everyone.