by Codge » Mon Nov 13, 2006 9:45 am
Not at all Jimmy,My comment was made to help,not put the boot in. It would indeed be a crying shame if you miss out on an opportunity one day because your English is not up to scratch.
So if it takes longer to write something because you need to consult a dictionary then so be it.
English is the hardest language to learn,as it is made up of bits and pieces of other languages, and I really take my hat off to people who learn it as a second language. Your generation suffers due to having spell checkers,that speak American, and now with text language,that will be permitted in exams this year,but due to the outcry I would guess not next year.
Your posts are understandable and I don't detect any dyslexia as such, but I'm no expert on that.
We tend to put the effort into things we like,and English was my least favourite subject at school. If you make yourself put the effort in you will get results. Reading helps too. Still I think the best thing to do is get a pocket dictionary and use it! As a pilot there is an incredible amount of paper work and manuals to read and exams and tests to take,and you will be required to make reports and things.
English, Maths, and Physics (Science) are what is required to be a pilot and they always seem to put it in that order too!
We all have our prejudices whether we admit it or not. I'm sure a piece of writing full of spelling mistakes and bad grammer and bad choice of words will be deemed by many to have been written by, shall we say 'not the brightest bulb on the Xmas tree'!
Personally I think intelligence is relative. Where as someone might be very intelligent with academia but completely useless when it comes to practical things like digging a hole in the ground to plant a tree! (That is a true story! My cousin,same age as me who is a policy analyst for the fire service at the Beehive,was asked to plant a tree for another Aunty and didn't know how. She thought he was being lazy and cheeky until the boys father stepped in and embarassed as he was, said well yes he has never held a spade in his life!) I have much respect for pilots as they have to have a range of skills,practical as well as intellectual. You can't learn to fly by reading about it. Alot of so called experts are just people who have read lots of books on a certain subject. I am not impressed by someone who has a string of letters after their name. To me that only means they've read books for a few years and recited back to examiners what they want to hear.
You may have seen the Chenobyl disaster on telly last night. The guy with the most 'qualifications' was responsible because he knew best.(So he thought!)
They say the safest pilots are the ones with less than 500 hours and that the ones between 500 and 1000 are the ones who are the most complacent, that's the ones who have not had a real 'situation' to deal with, but they will have read about them!
Anyway, good luck Jimmy,I'm sure all of us on the forum will be following your future with interest and praying and rooting for you all the way!
Kind regards,
Yours simcerely, Stephen (Codge)
PS: We all make mistakes, just try not to make the same one twice.
2 wrongs don't make a right but 2 Wrights made an aeroplane!