Private Pilot Flight Training and Instruction
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Failed Teaching
The most dangerous aspect of flying and flight instruction
is that the FAA Part 91 system lets incompetents fly and get
sweetheart proficiency checks just by careful selection of instructors.
The degree of incompetence will vary from session to session
and landing to landing. Proficiency problems require more than
one flight to uncover. The failure of an instructor or an examiner
to uncover deficiencies will eventually cost lives and money.
Under stress the flight weaknesses of pilots will arise to the
surface and be apparent. A skill deficit need only appear once
to cause a fatal accident. Fact is, an instructor can do little
to prevent a pilot from practicing dangerous flight and ground
procedures. The maintenance records of many an FBO and flying
club are living records of substandard piloting.
Many club pilots are low-time or at least low time in type.
A club checkout is more likely to provide currency rather than
proficiency. Initial currency for a pilot with low hours in type
is not enough. The best option is to require additional time
in type until an instructor can confirm proficiency to the private
pilot level. The pilot who will not limit his flying to the skills
he has proficiency in performing.
Age has a subtle reduction of information processing ability.
Flight instructors and designated examiners are the gatekeepers
of aviation safety. Being a 'good-guy' is not being an ethical
gatekeeper. The safety of an airplane and its non-pilot passengers
rest in the ethical standards of the examiners overseeing flight
operations. Pilots who haven't flown for several months or even
years should get recurrent training in proportion to their lack
of currency.
Habits are a large part of learning to fly. As in life, flying
habits can be good bad and everything in between. The habits
you want are characterized as good and safe. Essential good-safe
habit is the use of checklists. A major bad habit of checklists
is the acceptance of distractions in the use of the checklist.
A good habit is the efficiency with which the checklist sequence
is completed. Even, better a way to make sure nothing was skipped
or otherwise missed. Beyond the checklist we have radio procedure
habits, flight control positions during taxi, weather/wind awareness
and regional knowledge. Do not let your awareness of the area
be limited by official publications. Finally, always know the
next two things you are going to do. Otherwise you will be behind
the airplane.
The first distraction from a pilot's checklist or flying routine
is the first step in the accident chain. A distraction is anything
that happens with weather, ATC, aircraft, or person that causes
fixation. On fixation you stop thinking beyond the one element
to the exclusion of all else. A primary distraction, such as
engine failure, sets the stage and process for what comes next.
A secondary distraction is usually one of a system. Vacuum failure
becomes primary only in IMC conditions. Radio system failure
is not a VFR emergency and should considered a nuisance rather
than a distraction. The GPS is certain to reduce the 'lost' distraction.
Flying a complex unfamiliar aircraft is the ultimate distraction.
Familiarity with an aircraft gives intuitive reactions. It only
takes one unfamiliar instrument in an aircraft to create distraction.
A pilot must not allow any unexpected situation take mind and
eye time away from flying the aircraft. When a distraction stops
thinking the stopping of the airplane is not far behind.
A Need
to Communicate
What is the only question an instructor can never answer?
It is the unasked question. Many concerns are unspoken. The unspoken
fear of every student is what do I do if something happens to
the instructor. An instructor who fails to warn the student of
changes in sound, thumps and bumps before they happen is creating
needless tension. Warn students that crosswind landings are done
on one wheel. Flight operations where the ground and speed of
the plane are apparent bother some far more than does flight
at higher altitudes. Flights in or near clouds give similar effects.
The sensations that create pleasure in the instructor can worry
the student.
Misleading the instructor as to your concerns, fears, preparation
or available time is not part of the process. Concerns and fears
are normal; expressing them gives you an opportunity to face
them down with help from the instructor. Pleasing the instructor
is not part of the process. Ask the hard questions for they show
a brain at work. A well-directed student question is progress.
Being inquisitive and skeptical is desirable
The student is encouraged to ask questions. Willingness to
ask is more important than the question itself, since it shows
the quest for knowledge. Often, the student does not have the
background needed to express the question. Give an instructor
one key word and he will expound for at least 10 minutes. When
the student is expected to pay both for the time to ask the question
and for the instructor's time to answer, a powerful dissuasive
factor is in force. (For this reason I do not charge for ground
time but make up for it with what I charge for flight time.)
It is up to the instructor to fill in the voids between the asked
and unasked. As often as not, the student cannot remember the
question. For this reason, I suggest that the student always
carry a question card as a memory aid. The unasked and unanswered
question is a tension producer and interferes with learning.
The student is not expected to know all the possible causes
and effects of what they do. Some things about flying can be
learned from books but much of it is experimental to the individual.
You try. You try and you try again. You sleep on it. Talk with
the instructor about your concerns. Sometimes you go back to
review a basic skill that is showing weakness. Then you go and
try again. Talent is not a requisite for flying any more than
for driving. It takes tenacity to face the frustrations sure
to occur as you learn to fly. The pleasures of flying are worth
it.
The instructor's ability to anticipate problems by discussing
them prior to a flight helps the student accept as normal his
own difficulties. The unexpected difficulty creates student tension
and affects ability to learn. Student concerns that may exist
due to the presence of high terrain, bodies of water, or thermal
air currents, or lack of preparation should be approached gradually.
Several flights may be required to familiarize the student with
the fact that mountains can't jump. Water can be overflown at
safe gliding altitudes. Turbulence can be gradually introduced
by selecting the time of day and where to make flights. Much
'turbulence' is pilot induced by a tight grip and spontaneous
reaction.
The misconceptions possible in flying never cease to amaze
me. The instructor must recognize and train or retrain accordingly.
It is far better to be taught correctly in the first place. The
repair of instructional damage is both difficult and dangerous
because of the potential for reversion. This means that, in an
emergency, the student may instinctively revert back to the first
instructional procedure no matter how wrong. Misconceptions can
be varied as psychological, intellectually misunderstood, educationally
missing, or agnosic (oblivious to the obvious). Much of learning
to fly is to overcome misconceptions.
Early on, I mentioned something about my opinions in regard
to flight instruction. Synonymy is the study of degrees of meaning,
the fine distinctions between words of similar meanings. Your
views of flying and any of its parts may be shaded differently
than your opinions. The pilot is always trying to make judgments
about the truth of occurrences while flying.
My perception and word selection will often be different from
yours. What you may see as poorly or well done, I will see as
normal. I may require a student to repeat additional maneuvers
to make safety related changes or to build habit constants. Ground
time may be required to discuss cause and effect or to correct
erroneous conceptions. It is important that you, as the student,
feel free to discuss with the instructor your understanding of
a given situation using your own words. It is not uncommon for
a student to be unable to explain a given situation. In this
latter case a follow-up phone call may be useful.
After giving the same information for several years, instructors
tend to become complacent and assume that this present student
has the same comprehension as the last student. This assumption
may be far from the truth. Failure to lay the ground work, based
on a student's background, will reap a terrible harvest. A student
should not enter the plane until he knows what he is about to
do and why it is required. The why of a given activity includes
how much, how far, and why not. A good instructor tries to give
the reasons for any instruction. The understanding of the student
is confirmed when the student can give the essentials in their
own words. Teaching flying is unique in that there are forces
acting on the student of which both the student and instructor
may be unaware. The inherent fears of man, the pre-conceptions
from past exposures, the economic pressures, and social factors
all lie in wait to make the teaching/learning process more difficult.
Written by Gene Whitt
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