Private Pilot Flight Training and Instruction
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A Training Program
I make a practice of having prospective students come to my
home (office) for a couple of hours to discuss flying. I request
that the student arrive on time with a tape recorder. Too much
information is covered to be remembered, otherwise. We begin by
discussing their needs, requirements, motivation, background and
prior experience. Sometimes, the specific future flying plans
of the a student requires somewhat different instruction. I advise
getting any insurance and appropriate flight medical before beginning
training or making any purchases.
A student is not supposed to know very much in the beginning.
I will ask many questions as an instructor. It is not my intention
to demean the student. I need to find out the student's limits
of knowledge. I need to know what you don't know. When I get a
wrong answer, it probably means that I asked the wrong question.
A major part of teaching is knowing the question to ask that will
enable the student to identify the upper limit of his knowledge.
The correct question and answer combination leaves the student
with a sense of accomplishment. It allows the instructor room
for further extension of that knowledge. Questions are a learning/teaching
tool.
The study process is just beginning with the completion of traditional
ground and flight readings. The initial information package is
just the foundation upon which to build. I set up a flight and
study program according to the situation as I see it. I explain
how the success of any teaching I may do depends on their background.
The better the student understands the value and necessity of
the study program, the more likely I will find a well-prepared
student for each flight.
Thanks to the use of the tape recorder much greater instructional
efficiency can be obtained. More time can be spent on the ground
both in preparation for the flight and in flight review. The student
knows that the information is available for review. The tape recorder
in the air gives the student an opportunity to re-fly the exercise.
The student will hear directions over the intercom system that
he responded to without thinking. Things will be said on the radio
tape that never reached his consciousness during the actual flight.
It is suggested that the student playback the tapes initially
while driving and then during study periods where notes and outlines
of information should be compiled on 4 x 6 cards or a computer
file. This information can be a valuable review program later.
Just because information is on the tape does not mean that the
instructor can assume it is understood and capable of being applied.
The best time to begin flying lessons is in the late fall. This
is the time of the year when weather will allow development of
go/no-go judgment in the student. It also allows the exposure
of the student to SVFR (Special Visual Flight Rules) and other
adverse weather under the guidance of the instructor. Weather
will help determine the spacing of instruction. Cross country
flight conditions will provide a desirable mix of winds and weather.
Night flight requirements can be met well before midnight. By
late spring the student should finish his requirements and complete
the flight test just in time for the good weather of summer. The
summer is used to develop hours and experience. By winter, selective
flying can continue secured by the knowledge acquired the previous
year. Too many students give up flying when faced with winter
weather unlike any they experienced during a summer of instruction.
In recent years the "total immersion" method of flight
instruction has come into vogue as an efficiency/cost saving mechanism.
It works, at a cost in experience. A certain amount of seasoning
experience that is acquired by extending the instruction over
varying weather conditions is lost by such concentration. Compressed
training both in ground and flight training makes it possible
to produce an educated fool who flies. I would like my students
to grow in experience by enjoying flying. As a pilot advances
up the flying ladder, he will find that ratings and knowledge
are expected but experience is preferred. Experience is an unpleasant
teacher since it gives the test first and the lesson afterwards.
Aviation skills are composites of several fundamental elements.
The single elements are introduced, learned, and mastered on at
a time through practice. Practice of the right kind that is. Each
element is then combined with another element. The aggregate of
the single elements is harmonized through practice and anticipation
until they produce a continuous flow called a maneuver. A maneuver
is not mastered as an entirety until the basic elements are mastered
and sequenced. The success of a maneuver is based on the performance
of each basic element. Any defective element will affect the maneuver
and can be the precipitating cause of an accident.
The ideal is any teaching program is a plan that gives maximum
positive transfer of a selected learning skill to a progression
of tasks with a minimum of interference between skills learned
in separate tasks. What this means is
that the making of 30° banks in basic flight maneuvers
in level, climbing, and descent will be applied to the traffic
pattern as they are performed with variations in flap configuration.
This is a complex process where the instructor and student are
seeking consistency, anticipation, and safety awareness.
There are only two types of flight instructors; those who are
trying to get out of instructing and those who are trying to stay
in instructing. I am trying to remain an instructor because I
see a need. The treasure of experience, required of an instructor,
can only be built up by operational time. Unfortunately, it is
time that causes a reduction in experienced instructors.
Instructors begin to customize of their training program before
the first flight. For the individual's motivation, background
and time the instructor must have different way to present ground,
flight and post flight instruction. The instructor's program should
expose the student with the full field of required knowledge,
familiarize him with the local situation and lay the groundwork
for the next higher phase of training.
The very first flight lesson must have planned objectives both
immediate and of longer range. The student must be aware of the
immediate and perhaps of the longer range ones as well. The best
way to waste the time and money devoted to flying is to not know
what is to be accomplished. Every lesson has stated or written
objectives and measurable results. A properly integrated flight/ground
program will bring the student to the airplane prepared for that
lesson, expectant of a partial review and eager to be prepared
for the next flight.
I often believe I became a flight instructor to get even. Much
of my own instruction was excessively wasteful of time and money.
A student is under considerable physical and emotional stress
when learning to fly. If cost is contributing to the student's
stress, it would be best to stop flying until funds are acquired.
Learning to fly is expensive, and no amount of anxiety is going
to change the cost. Don't waste time trying to change things that
can't be changed. (What, again.) Use of the correct terminology
is an essential part of flying. Vocabulary development is a must.
An instructor must be a good at making any explanation fit into
the student's level of comprehension. The best explanations take
place on the ground; the best demonstrations take place in the
air.
Flight instruction is a behavior forming and modification process.
You are working in an extremely precise and unforgiving profession.
Behind every major flight performance there is a multiplicity
of small movements and skills required in making a safe result
possible. Students learn their attitudes toward flying from the
instructor. Attitudes affect behaviors. The teaching of a safe
flying attitude is even more important than a high skill level.
I will try to remember to always give the "why". If
I forget, ask. The reason behind doing a particular act makes
the act more meaningful, more likely to be remembered, and more
acceptable to the student.
The instructor should have given some idea as to what to expect
on the next flight. This information is basic to any preparation
required. My students are expected to follow up with a phone call
the night before a flight so that in addition to discussion of
the planned flight alternatives caused by weather or time can
be covered. As a student, you can reduce the stress of a lesson
by being prepared. Your first instructor will set your standards
of expectations and preparation. The biggest problems will be
scheduling. Most of the expense of learning to fly is due to a
poor scheduling program.
Prior to every flight I will spend at least 30 minutes discussing
the skill building blocks upon which the coming maneuvers will
be based. I will walk through, diagram, and 'handee' so that the
student understands both the maneuvers and the performance parameters.
I will depart up wind if possible to make the flight less costly.
I use the climbout to teach skills such as Dutchrolls. I plan
the entire lesson so that when completed we will be in position
to contact our home base.
We make a sequential listing of the expected radio frequencies
we will need. We review the universal frequencies that we should
know. According to our experience we will mentally, orally, or
write the expected communications to accompany the frequencies.
The night before we will check with the FSS for the forecast that
applies to our expected flight time. An hour before leaving home
we will make another weather check with the FSS and perhaps even
make a phone call to our destination if no weather is available.
I help in arrival planning to know the runway in use and wind
conditions. You will save far more than the cost of the phone
call by being able to make an efficient arrival.
The final flight preparation should be a check with the instructor
if you have any unanswered questions. Instructors who enjoy flying
respond to the student who is inquisitive and makes available
the extra effort and time to learn more. A good student helps
the instructor do a good job. Don't wait until you get into the
airplane to ask the "What if...," questions.
During the post flight debriefing it is beneficial if the student
is able to make a self analysis of how he performed. It is important
that the student recognize good, satisfactory, and poor performances.
This means that the student must know what the tolerances of acceptability
are. It is even more important that the causes be determined.
If, for whatever reason, his solo performance is outside these
limits he must so advise his instructor and plan for a corrective
lesson. Every student flight should have its parameters designed
to meet requirements for the flight examination. To fly otherwise
is a waste of time and money.
Written by Gene Whitt
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