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I was talking to a friend today about how difficult it is to find a
personable golf instructor. I'm a pretty so-so golfer and it really turns me off that most instructors are very arrogant and stuck up. I got to thinking that I sure hope students don't see CFIs the same way. I've never considered myself better than my students so I sure help I don't come off as arrogant in anyway. As a CFI I know that other CFIs interact with me differently so I'm not sure I would know if other CFIs are stuck up (as a CFI I often find that check out rides are abbreviated, fees are reduced or instruction hours are under billed for fellow CFIs). I've never considered the holding of a CFI certificate to mean that I'm any type of super pilot. In truth, anyone who takes enough checkrides can get the certificate, its really something that any can achieve. I hope other CFIs see it the same way. -Robert, CFII |
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On Jun 25, 4:13 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote:
I was talking to a friend today about how difficult it is to find a personable golf instructor. I'm a pretty so-so golfer and it really turns me off that most instructors are very arrogant and stuck up. I got to thinking that I sure hope students don't see CFIs the same way. I've never considered myself better than my students so I sure help I don't come off as arrogant in anyway. As a CFI I know that other CFIs interact with me differently so I'm not sure I would know if other CFIs are stuck up (as a CFI I often find that check out rides are abbreviated, fees are reduced or instruction hours are under billed for fellow CFIs). I've never considered the holding of a CFI certificate to mean that I'm any type of super pilot. In truth, anyone who takes enough checkrides can get the certificate, its really something that any can achieve. I hope other CFIs see it the same way. -Robert, CFII Long time ago when I took my first intro flight, the CFI turned me off flying. Fortunately he did not turn me off permanently he only put it off by a few years. He seemed disinterested in the whole thing, and was unwilling to appreciate the excitement of my first time experience. I had read up quite a bit, so I knew more than someone with zero hours, and the CFI found it very annoying that I was asking questions about aerodymanics, such as how the rudders work, and adverse yaw and all that stuff. Having become a CFI myself, my guess is that he did not know the answers to my questions but was too proud to admit it, so he tried to play down my questions as dumb. |
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On Mon, 25 Jun 2007 13:13:10 -0700, "Robert M. Gary"
wrote: I was talking to a friend today about how difficult it is to find a personable golf instructor. I'm a pretty so-so golfer and it really turns me off that most instructors are very arrogant and stuck up. I got to thinking that I sure hope students don't see CFIs the same way. I've never considered myself better than my students so I sure help I don't come off as arrogant in anyway. As a CFI I know that other CFIs interact with me differently so I'm not sure I would know if other CFIs are stuck up (as a CFI I often find that check out rides are abbreviated, fees are reduced or instruction hours are under billed for fellow CFIs). I've never considered the holding of a CFI certificate to mean that I'm any type of super pilot. In truth, anyone who takes enough checkrides can get the certificate, its really something that any can achieve. I hope other CFIs see it the same way. -Robert, CFII You sound like the kind of CFI that I would be looking for. My CFI was very similar and I consider myself to be lucky in that regard. I'm sure that there are both good and bad CFIs, as there are with all walks of life, but I have run into some that are similar to your generic golf instructor description. During several check-out rides I have encountered CFIs (mostly young) who think that they are God's gift to aviation and that everyone should be flying to ATP standards. I can think of nothing that is as important to the prospective student as finding a CFI who is not an arrogant "super pilot" and who understands that he/she is not training to ATP or military standards. By that, I don't mean to downplay the need for proficency, just that one needs to walk (without being scared away) before he can run. RNR |
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I started instructing when I was 40, and I think that having a tad bit of
life experience transfers positively when interacting with students. To my younger students I was kind of a father figure, and to the old ones I was seen as experienced, when in fact I was feeling my way as all new instructors must. I haven't run across very many long-time instructors who came struck me as arrogant. Bob Gardner "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... I was talking to a friend today about how difficult it is to find a personable golf instructor. I'm a pretty so-so golfer and it really turns me off that most instructors are very arrogant and stuck up. I got to thinking that I sure hope students don't see CFIs the same way. I've never considered myself better than my students so I sure help I don't come off as arrogant in anyway. As a CFI I know that other CFIs interact with me differently so I'm not sure I would know if other CFIs are stuck up (as a CFI I often find that check out rides are abbreviated, fees are reduced or instruction hours are under billed for fellow CFIs). I've never considered the holding of a CFI certificate to mean that I'm any type of super pilot. In truth, anyone who takes enough checkrides can get the certificate, its really something that any can achieve. I hope other CFIs see it the same way. -Robert, CFII |
#5
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
I was talking to a friend today about how difficult it is to find a personable golf instructor. Hope this isn't par for the course :-)) I'm a pretty so-so golfer and it really turns me off that most instructors are very arrogant and stuck up. I got to thinking that I sure hope students don't see CFIs the same way. I've never considered myself better than my students so I sure help I don't come off as arrogant in anyway. As a CFI I know that other CFIs interact with me differently so I'm not sure I would know if other CFIs are stuck up (as a CFI I often find that check out rides are abbreviated, fees are reduced or instruction hours are under billed for fellow CFIs). I've never considered the holding of a CFI certificate to mean that I'm any type of super pilot. In truth, anyone who takes enough checkrides can get the certificate, its really something that any can achieve. I hope other CFIs see it the same way. -Robert, CFII My comment on this is the same comment I have shared with the CFI community for over 50 years; that being everything....and I mean EVERYTHING..... I ever learned about teaching people to fly I have learned from the students I have taught to fly. Every moment I ever spent in a cockpit was as a student learning to be a better student of my own profession. My students have taught me, molded me, shaped the way I teach, and made me not only a better teacher, but a FAR better pilot than I ever would have been had I not been a flight instructor. There is no room in aviation for arrogance. There is however, a slim line between confidence, ability, and arrogance. The CFI who knows the difference between these things is a flight instructor. Those who don't are not worthy of the certificate. Dudley Henriques |
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Andrew Sarangan wrote:
Long time ago when I took my first intro flight, the CFI turned me off flying. Fortunately he did not turn me off permanently he only put it off by a few years. He seemed disinterested in the whole thing, and was unwilling to appreciate the excitement of my first time experience. I had read up quite a bit, so I knew more than someone with zero hours, and the CFI found it very annoying that I was asking questions about aerodymanics, such as how the rudders work, and adverse yaw and all that stuff. Having become a CFI myself, my guess is that he did not know the answers to my questions but was too proud to admit it, so he tried to play down my questions as dumb. Maybe I've been lucky but I can't think of any instructor I ever flew with that came across as arrogant. There was varying dedication to teaching as some were just building hours towards a loftier goal, but every one of them shared a love of flying. And every one of them was quite approachable. Your later comments may well be right on the money. I see similar behavior at work at times: the nurses who show annoyance when you don't know the answer to one of their queries during our shift changes invariably wouldn't be capable of answering similar questions themselves. If they become intimidating enough, maybe you won't dare ask? As an aside, when they get particularly condescending I usually make a crack about they won't mind looking up the answer themself, as they're the only one in the room who gives a **** about the answer. Just so we understand each other clearly.... -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#7
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There is nothing inherently different about Certified Flight
Instructers than any other type of instructor (or teacher). Some are excellent, most are average and some are very poor. |
#8
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You bet your ass we are, and if you don't believe me I'll beat the crap out
of you!!! {;-) P.S. I've never charged a fellow instructor for anything at all, be it flight review, exams (when I used to give them), recurrent training, or anything else. I think Karl Harder (RIP), a legend down at Lincoln Airport, was my inspiration several dozen years ago. I scheduled a competency ride with him because I hadn't had a from-the-getgo primary student in about five years. When I asked him after the ride how much I owed him, he just said, "If you came here to learn how to produce a better student and pilot, how the hell can I charge you for that?" jw -- "Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, with chocolate in one hand and wine in the other, loudly proclaiming 'WOO HOO What a Ride!'" --Unknown I got to thinking that I sure hope students don't see CFIs the same way. I've never considered myself better than my students so I sure help I don't come off as arrogant in anyway. As a CFI I know that other CFIs interact with me differently so I'm not sure I would know if other CFIs are stuck up (as a CFI I often find that check out rides are abbreviated, fees are reduced or instruction hours are under billed for fellow CFIs). |
#9
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RST Engineering wrote:
whatever - You're sig was/is (in case it changes) so, so, TRUE!!!!!!!!! |
#10
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All of the CFI's I've dealt with were relatively personable.
I talk to people before I fly with them to determine if basic compatibility exists. If I have a hard time talking to someone in the FBO, I doubt we'll communicate as well as we can in the air. |
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