Private Pilot Flight Training and Instruction
Flight Training Article Library | Back To 4VFR.COM
Instruction
Initially, the ground instruction begins with basic background
and theory. The flight lesson is predicated by the use of preflight
and Postflight briefings. Elements of the lesson that contain
required knowledge preparation are covered and emphasized. There
is considerable advantage in having the instructor do both the
ground and flight training since this assures adequate coverage
of material. Even so, the student must supplement with a planned
comprehensive academic program. All questions should be completion
type. Flying is not made up of multiple choices.
A student must be made clearly aware of why a specific lesson
or drill exercise is required. The preliminaries of slow flight
at altitude must be seen as a prelude to takeoff and landing.
The stall has an additional value in familiarizing the student
with the idea that it is normal for things to disappear below
the nose. If possible the short and soft procedures should be
taught under actual short and soft field conditions. This is
too valuable a lesson to be taught otherwise.
It takes a blend of student and instructor planning and initiative
to get the best mix of academic study and flight training. It
is counter productive to let flying get too much of a lead over
the studying. Greater frequency in flying is only an advantage
if the academic aspects keep up.
Confidence is not based on hope. It is the result of advanced
planning and preparation. The pilot has made an analysis of the
flight and accepted the challenges exposed in the process. The
confident pilot has done the flight preparation required to make
certain the safest possible flight. The preflight, aircraft condition,
flight route, and alternatives are all known values. By flying
as precisely as you can when just flying for fun makes it much
easier when you must. Two pilots in the cockpit make it all the
more important ant the non-flying pilot act as a performance
monitor for the pilot-flying.
A teacher is a role model. Even the poorest teacher has a
value to the student by serving as a bad example of what should
be. I have spent the greatest portion of my two careers in striving
to correct the problems created by poor teaching. The flight
decisions made by an instructor should not be made without revealing
to the student as many of the large and small nuances that influenced
a given decision. These revelations will occur in part in the
planning stage, then expanded during the flight, and further
reinforced in a post flight review.
In the planning stage the choices made are over a wide range
of risk. A straight line is both relatively easy to draw and
fly. The options for flying other than a straight line must be
planned, flown and analyzed for relative risk. Only one person
is responsible for how well a given flight is safe and follows
the FARs. The PIC is the final authority in what is allowed to
happen. However, the FAA gets to second-guess your every decision.
In the past thirty years I have flown the Sierras about five
or six times each year. In those years I have had two memorable
weather flights. I have had perhaps two weather flights that
I have chosen not to make each year. Since most of my Sierra
flights are shared expense flights with students I have tried
to present a role model by demonstrating that even the experienced
have no-go standards of risk. I best serve my students by demonstrations
of judgment. Last year we drove back from Nevada rather than
face uncertain conditions. A lesson gains in importance when
the exercise of judgment dominates the other aspects. My most
recent flight met unforecast clouds at 9000' just past Sacramento.
Rancho FSS called ahead to Truckee AWOS and found that it was
reporting scattered conditions. We continued and landed without
a problem. To have gone ahead without knowing could have been
both expensive and dangerous. Know when and how to ask for help.
There are three different ways a pilot may use his competence
and experience. The full VFR flight over an oft flown route is
first and perhaps most common. Second, would be a flight in marginal
conditions that might require a SVFR departure or arrival. Third,
would be one in which either a departure or an arrival would
not be possible.
A pilot must know his limitations. He must know just how complete
his knowledge is of the area and obstacle locations. Aircraft
capability and personal competency all these come together in
making aeronautical decisions. Even not making a decision is
making a decision.
The flight responsibility of a flight instructor extends beyond
the immediate flight. A student is being given criteria for why
some decision choices are made as well as why others are rejected.
It is vital that the reasons for the choice of decisions are
selected. Decisions are not so much choosing between right and
wrong as it is in between good, better, and best. Their is no
flying skill involved in making decisions but rather a matter
of judgment of risk and consequences. You can never go wrong
making the safe decision.
If an instructor is limited to teaching by only one method
then he is only certain of reaching a limited number of students.
Instruction requires that you adapt your method of teaching to
the manner in which a student learns. A student learns best by
doing. Great improvement of this doing can be accomplished by
having the student talking his way through the lesson. Ability
to talk through a given procedure requires considerable anticipation.
There is much to know about flying. There is much to know
at varied levels about the same topic. When writing I 'shotgun'
what I say hoping to cover levels from beginning to end as much
as possible. When teaching an individual student I 'rifle' my
material by aiming at my perception of what the student knows
now and can absorb as new material. I always try to ad a pearl
that will come of value later.
Flying consists of a multiple sequence of complex situations.
Often the actual performance is the simplest thing to do but
the most likely where something will go wrong. With performance
at the 100% level we find that 95% of what happens is mental
and only 5% manipulation. If you should begin to manipulate more
quickly than your mental capability can control bad things happen.
You are entering a sphere of reaction instead of anticipation.
When your are mentally prepared to do what you are supposed
to do, you have entered the sphere of anticipation. Perhaps the
best way to understand this is to watch a competition aerobatics
pilot go through the entire timed routine in the middle of a
small room. The aerobatic pilot is exercising the mental 95%
of the performance knowing that the remaining 5% will be in place.
What does or can the average pilot do? Every flight should
be a planned lesson with a sequence of simple parameters. How
can you make what you do in the cockpit more orderly? How can
the complex sequence be ordered into a simple flow pattern? How
can your pencils, charts, and frequencies be ordered by sequence
and discarded when no longer needed? You cannot properly order
your cockpit and materials without doing the 95% of mental performance
prior to a flight.
When I teach a lesson, we--the student and I--go through as
many aspects before the flight as I deem necessary. This means
we walk/talk through the routes, radio procedures, maneuvers,
responsibility sharing, and the standards of performance sought.
Every flight has some potential hazards that need to be opened
to the student. Avoidance is always an option but not always.
Some hazards must be faced since student exposure is in itself
a valuable lesson. For example, flights over water, marginal
conditions, higher terrain or through Alert Areas. After the
lesson the entire flight is reviewed as to areas of excellence,
satisfactory, and needs improvement in performance.
Getting behind the aircraft requires that the pilot do the
important things first. This means that he sort out the degrees
of importance of things to do. With many possible options you
must be able to simplify both your thinking and performance in
coping with complex situations. Only by being fully prepared
for the worst thing that can happen do you have some assurance
that it never will. I approach flight instruction as the most
complex kind of flying that I do.
Written by Gene Whitt
Flight Training Article Library | Back To 4VFR.COM
|