We Help You Pass
Our free online study guide really works. You can study for your FAA private pilot ground school exam right now. For more info about the 4VFR.COM project, click here. You can find a daily update log here.

Live ATC Audio Streams
Tune into live air traffic control frequencies from North America. This feature requires Real player. Start listening to ATC now!

Reference Library
Our glossary lists and databases have grown quickly. I am working to create an on-line reference library to tie together all the loose ends. You can check out what is currently available in the library

FAA Practice Exam - New!
Introducing our newly enhanced practice exam. Now with figures!. Take a test a day for a week, and I guarantee you will do better on your exam.

Get Started Now

Show your support for 4VFR.COM - Link us. Bookmark us. Tell your mother about us. Press CTRL-D to bookmark this site now!. Check out one of our proposed T-Shirt Designs.

Exams Taken 992,074

Feature Article: Training Attitudes

A casual approach to flying can be hazardous. Flying requires considerable planning and rethinking of the options as the flight progresses. The midset of the pilot must be ahead of the airplane. When your situation but two options and you make your choice, it is no longer an option. It is a last resort.

The pilot must be prepared to accept things about which he can do nothing. Aircraft performance limits must be accepted as the limits. You must have weather limits, the FARs set minimums. Minimums are not always safe minimums. Your emergency, be it aircraft or weather, must be featured in your training and again in your reviews.

Instruction that does not expose the student to real weather situations that compromise the continuance of flight is not adequate. The student must be exposed to the difficulties, taught the knowledge and procedures required and given an opportunity to see how the process can be carried to a safe and satisfactory conclusion.

Every adverse situation is a learning opportunity. The student needs the opportunity to make the go/no go decision. Then the instructor has an opportunity to turn the situation two different ways. Stay on the ground and show the student how his decision was the right one or takeoff and show how the decision to go was either right or wrong as weather develops. The making of mistakes is an important part of learning to fly. While I do not teach the salvaging of landings because I emphasize to go-around, I do want a student leaving me to know how to make the safe choices when it comes to unexpected weather. I have a still standing offer to every student I have taught. I will come and pick him up should he decide to wait out the weather.

The actual exposure will give the student skill, understanding and experience those goes beyond quoting an FAR. The knowledge is initially acquired on the ground; it is the flying that makes the knowledge memorable.


Last Modified June 7, ©2026 TAGE.COM

Related Links
Featured Articles
  • Wearing Thin Pants
  • 1998 Nall Report
  • Weather Accidents
  • Diversion to Alternate
  • Spins - A History
  • Cruise Control
  • Not Making Progress?
  • Illusions - Natural Illusions
  • Service Bulletin
  • The LORAN System
  • Spins Were A One Time Thing In 1914
  • Nice To Know Information
  • Retractables
  • Rectangular Patterns
  • Trim History

    More Flight Training Articles...

  • Student Kudos
    "I have taken the exam a number of times and consider it a great aid in study for the written exam....I definitely agree that it will increase my score.... Thank you...."
    - Clif Downes