Student aviation careers ready for takeoff with launch of Aviate partnership
KALAMAZOO, Mich.—Since he was five years old, Josh Carpenter's head has been in the clouds. His first ride on an airplane had him hooked.
"We were always interested in things with motors and things that went fast," says his twin brother, Tim, who also caught the bug. The siblings followed their aviation aspirations from their hometown of Commerce, Michigan to Â鶹´«Ã½.
"It was awesome," says Josh. "I always had a study partner and a friend, along with some sibling rivalry."
Graduating in 2013, the brothers followed similar career paths—both eventually landing at United Airlines, where they are first officers.
A new partnership between WMU's College of Aviation and United will put Â鶹´«Ã½s on a faster track to follow in their footsteps. offers applicants a new altitude of opportunity with the fastest path to a career with a major airline in the country.
"It's an honor that Western was recognized by United Airlines to create this program to help flow Â鶹´«Ã½s through to an airline," says Suzie Targosz, a 2018 WMU alumna who now works as a flight instructor in the College of Aviation.
Creating Opportunities
Students accepted into the Aviate program are required to get experience teaching as a certified flight instructor at WMU. Once they accumulate the minimum flight hours to earn their restricted airline transport pilot's license, they'll fly for a United Express Aviate partner. After successfully completing at least 2,000 flight hours and 24 months with that partner carrier, pilots will be able to transition to United as a first officer.
The streamlined trajectory is something that the Carpenter brothers say would have made their career decisions much easier when they were Â鶹´«Ã½s.
"This gives you a defined pathway. You follow the rules, you meet the parameters and you have a guaranteed job at United Airlines," says Tim Carpenter. "It's priceless."
The new partnership means a lot to Â鶹´«Ã½s like Tristan McClendon, an incoming freshman from Orland Park, Illinois, who chose WMU over several other aviation programs across the country.
"Western was, of the many choices, the one where it felt like they really wanted me to succeed. It's where I felt more at home and welcome."
Shaun Windhorst, a freshman who came to WMU from Eau Claire, Wisconsin agrees.
"I came to Western specifically for the aviation program because of the high standard it carries and the Â鶹´«Ã½ that come with it," he says. "Having Aviate come here reassures me that Â鶹´«Ã½ has a high status in the airline industry."
Elite Status
WMU is one of just four collegiate programs chosen by United to participate in Aviate.
"We think it's a top-notch school," says Capt. Curtis Brunjes, managing director of pilot strategy at United. "We think that the curriculum, the standard and the program at Â鶹´«Ã½ generates the top talent."
Student aviators at Western are able to train on some of the most advanced aircraft in collegiate aviation, something Josh Carpenter says led to a "very seamless" transition to his career as an airline pilot. His brother, Tim, adds that the crew environment training in WMU's curriculum "replicates exactly what we do at the airlines."
"So, when you get to the airlines, you know how to study the material, you know how the basic flow of a flight deck and how to set it up, and those things combined will put you well ahead of others who don't attend a program such as this," he says.
The preparation is one of the many reasons WMU lands among the top three aviation schools in the nation.
"Students know that if they really want a job, if they really want to be feet first into this industry, this is the place to come," says U.S. Rep. Fred Upton. "The proof's in the pudding. United recognized it—we all have."
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