How To Become A Flight Attendant
Most people think getting a cabin crew job is mostly about the interview.
The interview is where it starts. The training is where it gets serious.
Ground school runs for four to eight weeks depending on the airline. It covers safety and emergency procedures, door operations, fire suppression, first aid, evacuation, ditching, and security. The exams are written and practical. Failure rates are not zero.
Then comes the initial operating experience, supervised flights in revenue service before you operate independently. After that, annual recurrence training keeps those qualifications current for the duration of your career.
What makes cabin crew training different from most other career qualifications is that the safety element is non-negotiable. Airlines are not training hospitality staff. They are training safety-critical crew who also deliver service.
That distinction matters if you are thinking about applying.
If you are exploring a cabin crew career, this is a community with real answers.
Role #40: The Flight Attendant Training Path
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Ben Lovegrove
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How To Become A Flight Attendant
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