Techniques Of Flight Instruction Flashcards
Obstacles to learning during flight instruction
Feeling of unfair treatment
Impatience to proceed to more interesting operations
Worry or lack of interest
Physical discomfort, illness, fatigue and dehydration
Apathy due to inadequate instruction
Anxiety
Acute Fatigue
Short term or everyday living fatigue
Looks like:
In-attention
Distractibility
Errors in timing
Neglect of secondary task
Loss of accuracy and control
Lack of awareness of error accumulation
Irritability
Chronic Fatigue
Long term - caused by not enough time to fully recover from episodes of acute fatigue.
Drastically affects pilots flying and decision making abilities.
Demonstration-Performance Training delivery method
Explanation
Demonstration
Student performance with instructor supervision
Evaluation
Demo-Perf Explanation
Preflight discussion covering:
Steps in performance of maneuver
Completion Standards
Safety procedures
Demo-Perf Demonstration
Demonstration of the maneuver as it was explained.
If unable to demonstrate as previously explained you need to explain why.
Demo-Perf
Student performance and Instructor supervision
First allow student to perform the maneuver after demo.
Give time for practice
Observe student performance and give appropriate feedback
Demo-Perf Evaluation
Evaluate student performance
Record progress
Verbally advise student of progress
Offer concrete suggestions that help
End on a positive note
Telling and Doing Technique
Preparation
Instructor Tells - instructor does
Student tells - instructor does
Student tells - student does
Student does - instructor evaluates
Positive exchange of flight controls
Elevates confusion of who has flight controls
3 way exchange
Student must know the difference between the instructor “guarding” the controls and taking control of the airplane.
Sterile Cockpit
Refrain from nonessential activities during critical phases of flight.
Critical phases of flight:
All ground operations including taxi, takeoff, landing and non cruise flight below 10k feet
Nonessential activity:
Eating
Reading the paper
Chatting
Flight instructors should model this.
Use of distractions
The purpose is to determine that the student possesses the skills required to cope with distractions while maintaining aircraft control.
Helps prevent stall/spin accidents
Students must know when to take PIC authority and tell passengers when they are being distractions.
Examples of Distractions used by flight instructors
Drop a pencil
Ask student to reset the clock
Ask student to get something from the back
Ask student to read OAT
Ask student to compute TAS with flight computer
Ask student to identify a field suitable for a emergency landing
Have student reverse coruse after a series of s-turns
Integrated flight instruction
Instruction of the control of an aircraft by outside visual references integrated with instruction in the use of flight instrument indications for the same operation.
Not a substitute for a instrument rating
Scanning of instrument indications should never distract a pilot from looking for other traffic
Assessment of Piloting Ability
Essential for determining the level of learning of your student.
Assessment should provide direction and guidance to raise the level of performance.