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College of Public Affairs and Community Service

Visit our home page at http://cpacs.unomaha.edu

Photo by Tim Fitzgerald, University Affairs

Taking flight at UNO

Kailey Dwyer wasn't considering a career in aviation when someone suggested she take an undergraduate intro class offered by the UNO Aviation Institute.

"I liked it so much," she recalls, "I switched my major right away."

Dwyer is hoping to work in the safety administration area of aviation when she receives her bachelor's degree in May 2007. "A job as a safety inspector would be perfect," the Omahan says.

She is one of about 500 students enrolled in the Aviation Institute, an arm of the School of Public Administration within the College of Public Affairs and Community Service (CPACS) at UNO.

That compares to just 50 students when the institute began in September 1990. Inspired by Don Smithey, executive director of the Omaha Airport Authority, the institute was established to provide aviation and aerospace research and education. Omaha businessmen and co-founders Charles Durham, Walter Scott Jr. and Mike Harper garnered support from the community to fund the first four years of the program.

The institute, whose facilities, classrooms and offices currently are housed in Allwine Hall and the former Engineering Building (which will become the new home of CPACS in 2009), offers nearly 50 courses, compared with only five courses its first year.

The institute gives students a wealth of opportunities that stretch beyond the classroom to its Aviation Resource Center (see sidebar) and Advanced Simulation Facility, which features state-of-the-art Modular Flight Deck (MFD) simulators. Both opened in 2005.

Top tier program

Dr. Brent Bowen, director of the institute, says the combination of experienced faculty and staff members, the simulation facility and the resource center put the UNO Aviation Institute "among the top tier of university aviation programs in the nation."

The institute offers a bachelor of science degree in aviation with specialization in air transport administration or professional flight. It also offers a full roster of graduate courses for those seeking to obtain a master's of public administration degree with a concentration in aviation administration. Many aviation students are active in ROTC and other military programs.

Particularly attractive for students, Bowen says, is the combination of educational opportunities, the availability of scholarships and the low cost of tuition and flight training available through the institute.

Students also benefit from internships at many Omaha-area businesses, including the Jet Linx Aviation Flight Operations Center, the Mutual of Omaha Corporate Flight Department, the Omaha Airport Authority Communications Center, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and the Omaha Police Department Air Support Unit.

Networking opportunities are available through three student groups: Alpha Eta Rho, the UNO chapter of a coed fraternity for future aviation professionals; the Flying Mavericks Flight Team, whose 15 members participate in regional and national competitions and community events; and the Maverick chapter of Women in Aviation, a coed group with a focus on community service.

In addition to teaching and conducting research, the institute's faculty and staff often are called upon to serve as experts on state and national aviation issues. The institute disseminates its research findings by publishing the Journal of Air Transportation and the Aviation Institute Monograph Series. Additionally, more than 75 million people each year are exposed to the institute's widely publicized airline quality ratings, which Bowen publishes in conjunction with Wichita State University.

Smaller classes, state-of-the-art equipment, affordability and the camaraderie between students and faculty attracted Lucas Stritt to the institute.

"The institute offered the same opportunities as some of the top aviation programs, but UNO proved quite a bit more cost-effective," says Stritt, who received a bachelor's degree in aviation in the spring. He is working as a technical assistant at the institute while pursuing a master's degree at UNO.

"There are lots of great opportunities for a motivated student to get involved," he says.

Sara Glathar, student services specialist at the institute, says the cutting edge simulation facilities and student interaction with faculty members impress prospective students and their parents when they visit UNO.

"We can talk about our quality classes and marvelous faculty all day," Glathar says, "but when an 18-year-old sits in the MFD simulator and is surrounded by technology above and beyond anything they had imagined, that really seals the deal. The simulation facility is a huge recruitment tool that enables us to compete with any aviation program in the country."

Adjulation for simulation

Scott Vlasek is the institute's academic program coordinator and manager of technology. He says the MFD simulator offers more features than any other aviation training device on the market. It has a series of screens that wrap around the fiberglass cockpit and can simulate up to 13 different aircraft.

"We're at the forefront in terms of flight simulation technology training," he says, "and it's a standard we want to continue to set for our students in the future."

CPACS Dean B.J. Reed says he is proud of the Aviation Institute's "commitment to excellence."

"There's no better example than the addition of the advanced simulator," Reed says. "This technology provides a wonderful resource for students and for training outreach in the community."

On the institute's wish list is a jet simulator, equipment that could cost upwards of $200,000. In addition to being an educational and research tool, Bowen says a jet simulator would further the institute's role in the community, allowing the general public to rent time on the equipment.

"We plan to continue to refine our curriculum and expand our research and community outreach," he says, "but our main goal overall is to stay on top of the latest technology."

Dwyer, who also serves as a student assistant at the institute, says the combination of equipment and affordability translates into value. "I think the Aviation Institute is a hidden gem," she says, "one that more people should take advantage of."

 

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