Safety is the primary concern for flight attendants, and during their eight weeks of training, trainees need to learn all the safety requirements and guidelines set out by the FAA. Each type of airplane has its own door configuration, and flight attendants are required to learn the operation procedures for all of them.
Retaining this information requires diligent studying, long days in the classroom or simulators, and lots of exams, all of which leaves little time for personal recreation.
"Our students learn by repetition," said a Delta instructor named Kaki. "In an emergency, you don't have time to think — you're going to have to react. And flight attendants who have been in that kind of situation tell us it's true: They never even thought. They just reacted."
To keep performing well during training and retain all the information they've learned, a flight attendant trainee named Sharyl said, "you just have to keep working."
A former flight attendant for an airline owned by Delta wrote that he had to take an exam almost every day of training, and to pass he needed to score at least a 90%. He wrote that trainees are allowed to fail and retake an exam once. "If we received another score of less than 90%, we were excused from training and sent home," he wrote.
According to AirlineCareer.com, approximately 40% of flight attendant trainees industry-wide don't make it through training.
With Harvard's graduation rate falling around 98%, it's very likely that it's also much more difficult to graduate from Delta flight attendant training school than it is to graduate from Harvard.
"It's strange to say, but this process was actually harder than college or any other thing that I've done," Sharyl said.