The next era of aviation demands a new generation of skills

If we continue to train people as though tomorrow’s sector will look like yesterday’s, we will create a gap between technological innovation and human capability.
Technology is not just changing the tools of aviation. It is changing the work itself, write Suzanne Kearns and Gülnaz Bülbül.

As Canada accelerates investment in aviation and aerospace, there is a risk in believing the future will be won by technology alone. Artificial intelligence, automation, advanced manufacturing, simulation, and renewed defence-related spending are reshaping the sector at rema...

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