Southwest Texas College

Southwest Texas College

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Details

Program Length in Months: 12 Months
Approximate Program Cost: Not listed
GI Bill Approved: Not Listed
Ratings Offered: Airframe Only
Credential Type: Certificate
Class Schedule: Unknown
Housing: Not Listed
Approximate Total Clock Hours: Not listed
College or Private School: College/University
Industry Partners: None Listed / confirm (program mentions employer interest such as FedEx/UPS/airlines; confirm)
2401 Garner Field Road, Uvalde, TX 78801

Description

Southwest Texas College (SWTX) offers aviation maintenance training focused on preparing students for entry-level work in aircraft maintenance and for FAA mechanic testing in the General/Airframe subject areas. The program is offered through the college’s Aircraft General Maintenance (Level 1 Certificate) and Airframe Mechanics (Level 2 Certificate) pathway, and the curriculum is built around FAA Part 147 style content areas such as shop practices, ground operations and servicing, aviation science, basic electricity, weight and balance, and federal aviation regulations. Students move from foundational safety and servicing topics into hands-on airframe systems training that includes landing gear systems, airframe electrical systems, hydraulics/pneumatics/fuel systems, sheet metal fabrication and repair, assembly and rigging, welding, composites, wood/fabric/finishes, and structured airframe inspection. This start with the basics, then specialize structure can be a good fit for students who want to enter the workforce sooner in a maintenance-support role, and then continue toward deeper airframe qualification as they build confidence and technical depth.

Because SWTX serves a large rural and border-region footprint, students may appreciate the community-college environment, the lower barrier to entry compared to many private institutions, and the practical alignment with local employer needs. The Airframe Mechanics Level 2 Certificate is laid out across multiple semesters, helping students steadily build competency rather than attempting to compress every subject into a short-term format. The result is a training experience that emphasizes repeatable, safe workmanship: learning to read and follow technical data, complete inspections, document work, and perform repairs to standard. In aviation maintenance, these habits matter as much as the hands-on tasks themselves.

For prospective students evaluating SWTX, the most important fit questions are: (1) whether you want an airframe-focused path rather than a full Airframe & Powerplant track, (2) which campus/site your aviation courses will run through, and (3) what the day-to-day schedule looks like for lecture vs. lab time. The program is designed for students who learn best by doing and who want to work around aircraft and airframe systems structures, flight controls, landing gear, hydraulics, and the related electrical and inspection disciplines. If your long-term goal is an A&P, you’ll want to confirm how SWTX’s pathway aligns to your intended certification plan and whether additional powerplant training would be needed elsewhere.

Overall, SWTX’s aviation maintenance offering is a practical, career-oriented option for students in Southwest Texas who want structured training in airframe maintenance fundamentals, a clear certificate pathway, and a program plan that progresses from shop basics to advanced airframe systems and inspection.

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