Help Category
Training & Quizzes
Pilot-focused learning help covering lessons, quizzes, progress, and how the educational side of FlightLeague fits together.
Answers
Training & Quizzes
Open the questions that match what you are trying to solve.
Who are the training features designed for?
The training features are mainly designed for pilots, especially student pilots who want structure around syllabus progress, lesson completion, and quiz practice. That said, broader pilot users can still use the training area if they want a clearer learning framework or a refresher on key topics. Traveler mode is not the main audience for this part of the app, because the training system is built around pilot learning rather than general travel tracking. If you are early in your flying journey, the value is especially high because training progress, lesson grouping, and practice tools help you see momentum in a more organised way. More experienced pilots may still find the quizzes, mock exam flow, and learning library helpful.
How does training progress work in FlightLeague?
FlightLeague organises pilot training into a structured syllabus with lessons grouped by phase, then tracks your completion and progress across those sections. As you move through lessons, you can see phase progress bars, completion counts, and other progress indicators that make it easier to understand where you are and what still needs attention. This is most relevant in Pilot mode and especially useful for student pilots. Progress is meant to make learning feel visible and manageable rather than overwhelming. If your training card looks unchanged after finishing something, refresh the app or revisit the training screen to confirm the completion was recorded. Keeping your lesson activity consistent is the best way to make the training dashboard meaningful over time.
What is the difference between lesson quizzes, phase quizzes, and the mock exam?
Lesson quizzes are focused on a smaller slice of content tied to a specific lesson. Phase quizzes step back and test a wider section of the syllabus. The mock exam is the broadest experience and is meant to feel closer to a fuller test session. Together, they create a more natural progression from focused practice to wider review. This is a pilot training feature rather than a traveler tool. If you are new to the training area, lesson quizzes are usually the best starting point because they are more targeted and less overwhelming. Phase quizzes are useful when you want to see how a larger section is sticking, and the mock exam is better once you are ready for a more complete challenge.
What is a weak-topic quiz?
A weak-topic quiz is designed to help pilot users practise areas where their past performance suggests they need more reinforcement. Instead of repeating a completely random set, it focuses more attention on topics where you have answered incorrectly or less confidently before. This makes revision more efficient, especially when you do not want to guess what to study next. It is part of the pilot training ecosystem, not Traveler mode. If you feel like your weak-topic quiz keeps returning to the same areas, that usually means the app is doing its job and reflecting patterns in your results. The best way to change the mix is to keep practising, review explanations carefully, and improve performance in those weaker subjects.
What does AI or adaptive quiz mode do?
AI or adaptive quiz mode is designed to make practice feel more responsive instead of completely static. When available and configured, it can generate or tailor question behaviour around your progress and weaker areas. If it is unavailable, FlightLeague can fall back to standard question sets so you are not blocked from practising. This is a pilot-focused feature and may be Pro-gated or usage-limited in some cases. The practical benefit is that your revision can feel more personalised without losing structure. If a session behaves more like a standard quiz than an adaptive one, that does not necessarily mean something is wrong. It may simply mean the app has moved to the fallback path for that session.
Why does FlightLeague show explanations after answers?
Explanations are there to support actual learning rather than just score chasing. When you answer a question, seeing why something is correct or incorrect helps you build understanding and not just memorise patterns. That is especially useful for student pilots, where the goal is stronger judgement and clearer topic understanding over time. Explanations also help you make sense of weak-topic tracking, because they show you what went wrong and what to review next. This is part of Pilot mode’s training experience and is not a Traveler mode feature. If you want to improve faster, do not skip the explanation flow too quickly. A slightly slower review usually gives better long-term results than rushing through more questions.
How do XP, streaks, and levels work in training?
XP, streaks, best streaks, levels, and level titles are progression tools designed to make learning and activity feel more motivating. In the training side of Pilot mode, they reflect how consistently you practise and how much you engage with learning, rather than being random rewards. The idea is to make steady improvement feel visible and rewarding without turning the system into noise. Streaks are especially useful if you are trying to keep study habits alive during a busy period. If a streak breaks, it is best not to overthink it. The bigger value comes from returning to a consistent rhythm. These systems complement the syllabus and quiz structure rather than replacing the need for genuine understanding.
What is in the learning library?
The learning library supports Pilot mode with reference material across topics such as FAA core resources, handbooks, standards, charts, weather, procedures, and risk-related subjects. It is there to complement the training and quiz experience, not to feel like a completely separate app. That means you can move between structured lessons, quiz practice, and reference reading more naturally. For student pilots, this can make self-study feel more connected and less scattered. Traveler mode does not centre on this area because it is part of the aviation learning side of FlightLeague. If you are deciding where to start, a good approach is to pair a lesson or quiz with a related library topic so the knowledge feels more grounded.
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