Your Flight Controls
You studied for weeks. You aced the practice tests. So why does your brain go blank the second the real exam starts? Test anxiety on the FAA written is one of the most common experiences student pilots deal with, and it has nothing to do with how much you studied. In this episode, Jess breaks down the working memory problem behind blanking, the psychology of second-guessing yourself into wrong answers, and a test-day strategy that changes how you move through the exam. In This Episode: * Why your brain blanks even when you know the material * The first instinct fallacy: why we believe changing answers hurts us when the research shows the opposite * What ACS codes on your test report mean for your checkride oral exam * Jess's test day story: flashcards in the car, a tiny NC testing center, and changing correct answers * A two-pass test strategy that works with your brain instead of against it Key Takeaways: * Test anxiety eats into your working memory, splitting your brain between the test and the stress. The knowledge is still there. * Answer the questions you're confident about first. Go back to the hard ones once you've built momentum. * If you're second-guessing an answer, ask whether you have a real reason to change it or you've just been staring too long. * Your missed-question ACS codes are a study map for the checkride, and your CFI can help you target those areas. Resources: Free Private Pilot Study Sheet: https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing [https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing] Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute. New episodes drop weekly. Got a question or a topic you want us to cover? Reach out to us.
9 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Your Flight Controls community!