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Flying
Handbook Menu > Introduction
to Flight Training > Role of the Flight Instructor
The flight instructor is the cornerstone of
aviation safety. The FAA has adopted an operational training
concept that places the full responsibility for student training
on the authorized flight instructor. In this role, the instructor
assumes the total responsibility for training the student pilot
in all the knowledge areas and skills necessary to operate safely
and competently as a certificated pilot in the National Airspace
System. This training will include airmanship skills, pilot
judgment and decision making, and accepted good operating practices.
An FAA certificated flight instructor has to
meet broad flying experience requirements, pass rigid knowledge
and practical tests, and demonstrate the ability to apply recommended
teaching techniques before being certificated. In addition,
the flight instructor’s certificate must be renewed every
24 months by showing continued success in training pilots, or
by satisfactorily completing a flight instructor’s refresher
course or a practical test designed to upgrade aeronautical
knowledge, pilot proficiency, and teaching techniques.
A pilot training program is dependent on the
quality of the ground and flight instruction the student pilot
receives. A good flight instructor will have a thorough understanding
of the learning process, knowledge of the fundamentals of teaching,
and the ability to communicate effectively with the student
pilot
A good flight instructor will use a syllabus
and insist on correct techniques and procedures from the beginning
of training so that the student will develop proper habit patterns.
The syllabus should embody the “building block”
method of instruction, in which the student progresses from
the known to the unknown. The course of instruction should be
laid out so that each new maneuver embodies the principles involved
in the performance of those previously undertaken. Consequently,
through each new subject introduced, the student not only learns
a new principle or technique, but broadens his/her application
of those previously learned and has his/her deficiencies in
the previous maneuvers emphasized and made obvious.
The flying habits of the flight instructor,
both during flight instruction and as observed by students when
conducting other pilot operations, have a vital effect on safety.
Students consider their flight instructor to be a paragon of
flying proficiency whose flying habits they, consciously or
unconsciously, attempt to imitate. For this reason, a good flight
instructor will meticulously observe the safety practices taught
the students. Additionally, a good flight instructor will carefully
observe all regulations and recognized safety practices during
all flight operations.
Generally, the student pilot who enrolls in
a pilot training program is prepared to commit considerable
time, effort, and expense in pursuit of a pilot certificate.
The student may tend to judge the effectiveness of the flight
instructor, and the overall success of the pilot training program,
solely in terms of being able to pass the requisite FAA practical
test. A good flight instructor, however, will be able to communicate
to the student that evaluation through practical tests is a
mere sampling of pilot ability that is compressed into a short
period of time. The flight instructor’s role, however,
is to train the “total” pilot.
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