In a significant move aimed at strengthening the quality of aviation assessments in India, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has announced the creation of a dedicated panel of Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) to support the development and review of examination question banks.
The announcement, issued via a public notice dated March 12, 2026, signals a clear shift towards improving the robustness and credibility of DGCA’s examination system for both Flight Crew (FC) and Aircraft Maintenance Engineer (AME) candidates.
A Push for Quality and Reliability
According to the notice, Directorate General of Civil Aviation is setting up a structured panel of Subject Matter Experts under its Central Examination Organisation (CEO) to develop and maintain the question bank.
The intent is clear and long overdue. The regulator is aiming to build a question bank that is robust, comprehensive, and technically sound, with a strong focus on:
- Complete and balanced syllabus coverage
- High accuracy in technical content
- Reliable and consistent assessment standards
- Fair evaluation across all candidates
From an operational lens, this is a critical correction. For years, DGCA exams have drawn criticism from both students and instructors for inconsistent question patterns, outdated references, and, at times, ambiguous framing that leaves room for interpretation rather than testing clarity of knowledge.
By bringing in active industry professionals; airline pilots, instructors, examiners, and engineers. The system starts to reflect real-world aviation more closely. These are people who deal with current aircraft, procedures, and regulations every day. Their involvement should naturally filter out obsolete content and reduce poorly framed questions.
If DGCA manages to keep this panel dynamic, with periodic reviews and updates, it can significantly improve the credibility of the examination system and, more importantly, ensure that what is being tested is actually relevant to cockpit and operational environments.
Who Can Apply and How
DGCA has now formally opened the door for industry participation by inviting qualified professionals to register as Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) through the Pariksha portal under the “Registration for SME” section.
The detailed process, along with eligibility criteria, has been outlined in the Flight Crew User Manual available on the same platform, making it a fairly structured and transparent onboarding route.
What’s significant here is the wide pool of professionals being targeted. This includes active airline pilots, flight instructors and examiners, ground instructors, licensed aircraft maintenance engineers, and aviation academicians. In short, people who are directly connected to real-world operations and training.
For training organizations, especially FTOs, this is more than just participation. It’s influence. Institutions now have a genuine opportunity to contribute to how future pilots are evaluated. By getting their experienced instructors and domain experts involved, they can help shape question banks that reflect actual training challenges, operational scenarios, and evolving industry standards.
Why This Matters for DGCA Examinations
DGCA examinations, conducted by the CEO, are the backbone of licensing in India. These include:
For Flight Crew:
- Air Regulations
- Air Navigation
- Meteorology
- Technical General
- RTR (handled separately but aligned in standards)
For AME Candidates:
- Module-based exams aligned with CAR-66 framework
- Type-specific and regulatory subjects
In recent years, India has seen a sharp rise in pilot training demand, driven by airline expansion plans from carriers like IndiGo, Air India, and Akasa Air. With thousands of students entering the system annually, standardizing exam quality has become critical.
Expert Take: A Step Toward Global Benchmarking
From a commercial pilot’s standpoint, this is a step in the right direction and brings DGCA closer to the standards followed by regulators like the Federal Aviation Administration and European Union Aviation Safety Agency.
Both these regulators rely on well-structured, continuously updated question banks that are built and reviewed by subject matter experts. The emphasis is not just on theoretical knowledge, but on operational relevance. Questions are designed to test real-world understanding, decision-making, and application rather than memory-based responses.
India has needed this shift for a long time. With rapid fleet expansion across airlines, increased dependence on simulator-based training, and the gradual move toward competency-based training (CBTA), the examination system also needs to evolve in parallel.
A more structured and expert-driven question bank will help bridge the gap between ground knowledge and cockpit application. Over time, this can produce pilots who are not just exam-ready, but operationally sharper and better aligned with global aviation standards.
Impact on Students and Training Organizations
This initiative can bring much-needed consistency and clarity to DGCA examinations. Students are likely to face more predictable, syllabus-driven question patterns with fewer ambiguous or poorly framed questions. This naturally shifts preparation towards understanding concepts rather than relying on guesswork or pattern memorization.
For Flight Training Organisations, it’s a strong push to rethink training methods. The focus will need to move from rote learning to deeper conceptual clarity, structured ground training, and better academic tracking. Over time, this should lead to improved pass rates that genuinely reflect a candidate’s competence, not just exam-taking tactics.
The Road Ahead
The success of this initiative will ultimately depend on the quality and diversity of Subject Matter Experts brought on board, along with how frequently the question bank is reviewed and updated. Seamless integration with DGCA’s digital examination systems will be equally critical. Beyond that, incorporating structured feedback loops from candidates and instructors can help keep the system responsive and relevant.
If implemented effectively, this reform has the potential to significantly strengthen India’s aviation training ecosystem, making it more aligned with global standards and better equipped to handle the growing demand for skilled aviation professionals.



















