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Here's possibly a stretch of a question...
My daughter is only 7 but already I'm thinking of her driving and, hopefully, learning to fly (like me). I'd love to teach her myself if she shows interest. I've heard many times that a pilot makes a safer driver and, looking at myself & some other pilots I know, I believe that may be true. I've never seen statistics but would be interested in knowing if this is fact statistically. Anyway, I expect to be a CFII & further soon (com./inst. now) and was wondering if anyone has ever taught a sibling (or anyone for that matter) to fly before they learned to drive? Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Ricky |
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![]() "Ricky" wrote in message ... Anyway, I expect to be a CFII & further soon (com./inst. now) and was wondering if anyone has ever taught a sibling (or anyone for that matter) to fly before they learned to drive? My daughter had her Private license in both gliders and SEL long before she had a driver's license. Our strategy was simply to keep her so busy (and for us to be so accomidating with rides) as to delay her going through all the hassle of actually getting her operator's license. It worked! Most of her friends had already wrecked their first car before our daughter was driving by herself. She never had any serious accidents, and I don't even remember any tickets. Vaughn |
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"Ricky" wrote in message
... Here's possibly a stretch of a question... My daughter is only 7 but already I'm thinking of her driving and, hopefully, learning to fly (like me). I'd love to teach her myself if she shows interest. I've heard many times that a pilot makes a safer driver and, looking at myself & some other pilots I know, I believe that may be true. I've never seen statistics but would be interested in knowing if this is fact statistically. Anyway, I expect to be a CFII & further soon (com./inst. now) and was wondering if anyone has ever taught a sibling (or anyone for that matter) to fly before they learned to drive? Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Dunno if it made him a better driver, but my brother's son started as soon as he was tall enough to see out the side of a T-18 (still to short to see over the panel). -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#4
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On May 4, 8:24*pm, Ricky wrote:
Here's possibly a stretch of a question... My daughter is only 7 but already I'm thinking of her driving and, hopefully, learning to fly (like me). I'd love to teach her myself if she shows interest. I've heard many times that a pilot makes a safer driver and, looking at myself & some other pilots I know, I believe that may be true. I've never seen statistics but would be interested in knowing if this is fact statistically. Anyway, I expect to be a CFII & further soon (com./inst. now) and was wondering if anyone has ever taught a sibling (or anyone for that matter) to fly before they learned to drive? Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Ricky From my own experience as a youngster and later on as a CFI my opinion would be that you are safe and indeed well advised to treat the two issues separately. In my case, I was exposed from about age 8 to a serious flying environment where I was around flying and people who fly almost constantly. This culminated in an age 16 solo. I wasn't exposed to driving until age 15. As an instructor, I would advise that age 7 is just fine to start a youngster with an aviation exposure and education. Plenty of time later on for the driving. The reasoning for this is that almost all required to produce a safe driver has to be done while driving (expect learning the driver's manual of course), but flying requires a much deeper and more comprehensive learning curve where much of what has to be retained is learned outside the cockpit. So feel free in my opinion anyway, to start the exposure to aviation as early as your child's interest dictates it can be done. It's never too early to begin answering questions, and with a few well placed cushions and some monitoring from you, actual flying of the airplane can inspire a child as nothing else in the world could achieve. As for me, I loved every second of my early exposure to aviation. In the end analysis, I'd probably say that my learning to drive simply made my trip to the airport a bit faster :-) Hope this helped a bit, and the best of luck to you and your daughter. Dudley Henriques |
#5
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In article
, Ricky wrote: Here's possibly a stretch of a question... My daughter is only 7 but already I'm thinking of her driving and, hopefully, learning to fly (like me). I'd love to teach her myself if she shows interest. I've heard many times that a pilot makes a safer driver and, looking at myself & some other pilots I know, I believe that may be true. I've never seen statistics but would be interested in knowing if this is fact statistically. Anyway, I expect to be a CFII & further soon (com./inst. now) and was wondering if anyone has ever taught a sibling (or anyone for that matter) to fly before they learned to drive? Do you think it would make for a safer driver? I took flying lessons well before I started to drive. I wouldn't say I "learned to fly" at that point, as I didn't get my rating until much later and I didn't really have the proper judgement or mental attitude for it at the time. It's hard to say if it helped me with my driving. A decade later when I started in on it again, I think it helped my driving a fair bit even though I was 25 when I came back to it. The ideas of being "ahead of the airplane" (or car, as the case may be), of planning ahead, of doing things the "right way" as far as you are able but doing whatever it takes to survive if something goes wrong, all of this became much more apparent to me during flight training. I think this has made me much safer, but of course 80% of drivers believe they are above average. If a young person is mentally mature enough to absorb these ideas then I could see it being a big help. My little brother will be 16 this summer and is learning to drive. When he came to visit last summer we got him a few lessons with my club. We found an operation near my parents' place (I fly gliders so he wants to fly gliders, and that's tougher to find) and paid it a visit last fall, and supposedly he's been anxious to get back out there. He's asked me a lot of good questions about flying and driving, like responding to emergencies, the learning process, exercising judgement, and even just the mechanics of the stuff. It seems to me that being in command (even with the instructor) of a more unusual craft has given him an extra interest in the whole idea and it is my completely inexpert opinion that this will probably translate into being a safer and more knowledgeable driver than would otherwise be the case. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
#6
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On May 4, 8:24*pm, Ricky wrote:
wondering if anyone has ever taught a sibling (or anyone for that matter) to fly before they learned to drive? Do you think it would make for a safer driver? I'd think it would be worth a shot. Flying skills, methods and techniques certainly transfer, IME. I am of the opinion that kids learn to "drive" long before they take the wheel. Those that don't spend all their time in the vehicle playing video games, etc., anyway. They learn to endure and ignore G- forces. Learning to manage velocity and momentum seem bound to encourage greater control of practically any vehicle. Back in the day I got my first driving lessons sitting on a lap learning to point the car on a path intended to not need correction, probably in anticipation of eventually sending me out to plow. I think I've learned something that I can apply to driving from every different type of vehicle/equipment I've operated. ----- - gpsman |
#7
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Ricky wrote:
Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Ricky The evidence would be if an auto insurance company offered discounts to pilots. Their actuaries don't miss much. Curt |
#8
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In article ,
Curt Johnson wrote: Ricky wrote: Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Ricky The evidence would be if an auto insurance company offered discounts to pilots. Their actuaries don't miss much. Might could be a small enough group for them to safely ignore. |
#9
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Steve Hix wrote:
In article , Curt Johnson wrote: Ricky wrote: Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Ricky The evidence would be if an auto insurance company offered discounts to pilots. Their actuaries don't miss much. Might could be a small enough group for them to safely ignore. Progressive gives me a couple hundred bucks a year discount for belonging to IEEE, which has 375,000 members worldwide. There were 624,007 certificated pilots in the U.S. in January 2008 according to the FAA. |
#10
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Curt Johnson wrote:
Steve Hix wrote: In article , Curt Johnson wrote: Ricky wrote: Do you think it would make for a safer driver? Ricky The evidence would be if an auto insurance company offered discounts to pilots. Their actuaries don't miss much. Might could be a small enough group for them to safely ignore. Progressive gives me a couple hundred bucks a year discount for belonging to IEEE, which has 375,000 members worldwide. There were 624,007 certificated pilots in the U.S. in January 2008 according to the FAA. Darn, I shouldn't have dropped my membership to IEEE years ago. I wonder what other discounts there are? I can get a discount for being old though AARP. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI |
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