National Aviation Academy Inc – New England

National Aviation Academy Inc - New England

National Aviation Academy Inc – New England

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Details

Program Length in Months: 14 Months
Approximate Program Cost: Not listed
GI Bill Approved: Not Listed
Ratings Offered: Airframe & Powerplant
Credential Type: Certificate
Pets Allowed: Yes
Class Schedule: Day
Housing: Not Listed
Approximate Total Clock Hours: 2000
College or Private School: Private School
Industry Partners: American Airlines; Boeing; Envoy Air; Endeavor Air; Honeywell; GE Aerospace; Lockheed Martin; Panasonic; SkyWest; SpaceX
130 Baker Ave Extension, Concord, MA 01742

Description

National Aviation Academy (NAA) – New England is a career-focused aviation maintenance school that is built specifically to train future Airframe and Powerplant (A&P) technicians. NAA’s core Aviation Maintenance Technology (AMT) program is structured as an accelerated pathway that targets FAA eligibility requirements and prepares students for the written, oral, and practical exams that lead to A&P certification. On NAA’s program materials, the AMT program is positioned as a 14-month option with 2,000 clock hours and instruction across FAA-mandated subject areas that cover General, Airframe, and Powerplant content. Training is designed to be hands-on, combining classroom learning with shop and hangar work so students can practice real maintenance procedures in an environment intended to mirror industry workflows.

The New England campus is based in Concord, Massachusetts and operates as a two-facility training setup. NAA describes classroom and administrative space at its Baker Avenue facility, with hangar/shop instruction occurring on the flight line at Minute Man Air Field. This kind of split-campus setup matters for prospective students because it signals that the program is intentionally built around practical maintenance training, not just lecture-based coursework. If you are comparing schools, a key differentiator is whether you will spend significant time working on real aircraft systems, using common maintenance tools, and completing structured lab exercises that build muscle memory for inspection, troubleshooting, repair, and documentation.

NAA markets schedule flexibility through day and night class offerings in its broader program messaging, but also notes that night classes are currently offered at its Tampa Bay campus. For students considering New England specifically, it’s worth confirming the current cohort schedule with admissions so you can plan around work and family obligations. Another detail to validate during your admissions conversation is how NAA sequences the curriculum (for example, how General coursework transitions into Airframe and Powerplant blocks, and how test preparation is integrated throughout the program).

Career outcomes are a central part of NAA’s value proposition. The school highlights a network of hiring employers and industry relationships and positions aviation maintenance as a high-demand field with long-term career stability. When you tour or speak with admissions, ask about job placement support, interview preparation, and the types of employers recruiting from the New England campus specifically. Also ask what tools and aircraft platforms you will train on, how often lab time occurs each week, and how attendance policies work, since FAA-hour requirements typically mean strict participation rules. Overall, NAA-New England is best suited for students who want a concentrated, aviation-only training environment with an accelerated timeline to A&P eligibility and a curriculum centered on shop and hangar experience.

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