Air Traffic Control · New York

Air Traffic Control colleges in New York

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Air traffic control trains students to manage the safe separation and flow of aircraft using radar, communication, weather, and federal aviation procedures.

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What you'll study in a Air Traffic Control program

  • Principles of air-traffic management and flight control
  • Reading radar and electronic scanning displays
  • Maintaining safe aircraft separation and traffic flow
  • Radio communication and standard controller phraseology
  • Airspace structure and operating procedures
  • Weather interpretation and its effect on operations
  • Federal aviation regulations governing control work
  • Situational awareness and decision-making under pressure
  • Simulation and lab practice of tower and radar operations

Where a Air Traffic Control degree can lead

  • Air Traffic Controller
  • Tower Controller
  • Terminal Radar Approach Controller
  • En-Route Center Controller
  • Air Traffic Control Specialist
  • Flight Service Specialist

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 air traffic controllers median $144,580).

An Air Traffic Control program prepares students to manage the movement of aircraft so that planes stay safely separated and traffic flows in an orderly way through the airspace and around airports. Coursework applies technical knowledge to air-traffic management: students learn how controllers direct departures, arrivals, and en-route traffic, how radar and electronic scanning devices display aircraft positions, and how clear radio communication and standard phraseology keep pilots and controllers coordinated. Programs also cover weather and its effect on operations, airspace structure, and the federal aviation regulations that govern the work. This field is safety-critical and highly specialized, and it differs sharply from its aviation siblings. It is not about flying the aircraft, as piloting is, and it is not about repairing airframes and systems, as aircraft maintenance is. Instead, the focus is on the procedures, judgment, and situational awareness needed to keep many aircraft moving safely at once.

In the United States, the work runs through the Federal Aviation Administration rather than through a degree alone, so the honest path matters. Many students enter through an FAA-recognized Air Traffic Collegiate Training Initiative program, then go through FAA hiring, training at the FAA Academy, and on-the-job certification at a facility, with strict age, medical, and security requirements. For the closely related controller occupation, the typical entry-level education is an associate's degree, and collegiate programs often pair classroom theory with simulation and lab practice that mimic the radar displays and communication used on the job. Graduates may work in control towers, terminal radar approach facilities, and en-route centers, supporting both civilian and, in some cases, military and public-service aviation. Because requirements and the hiring process can change, students should verify the current FAA pathway and a program's standing before enrolling.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of air traffic controllers, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $144,580 and projects employment to grow about 1.2% from 2024 to 2034; an associate's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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