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#21
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Jose wrote:
I'll be sure to look you up if I go back into flight instruction. Looking for somebody to confuse? That's too easy. ![]() Jose You're going to LOVE the post I just made about you under Jim. Sorry if I offended you. No offense meant. Just telling you how it is. -- Dudley Henriques |
#22
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It really is true, 95% [made up number by guess] of flight students who get
a rating have learned at least to the 70% level on the knowledge and the practical test is in the 90% skill range of skill, but all rated pilots were seen to be "safe" on the day they got their test and left the instructors nest. But traditional classroom instructor, if judged by the American public schools, fails 80% of the students. "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... | Jim Macklin wrote: | If you read the whole thing, you'll see that I support flying with more than | one instructor, but particularly with a pre-solo student who does not have | the skill or experience to do a TO&L session. But the false expectation and | the bad habits, frustration and even failures that are likely create a | plateau or even a big back-slide. I've seen it happen, all the experienced | instructors have seen it and many students have experienced it. | | At any school, the instructor need to be coordinated and if there is a Chief | Flight Instructor {approved school] they should have procedures in place | just the Henry said previously. | | | | It's no use Jim. I've been dealing with Jose now for years. He seems | absolutely convinced that classroom teachers are WAY ahead of the curve | when it comes to us lowly CFI's :-) I don't think the guy has EVER asked | me a question about flight instruction. He just lectures and lectures | and lectures some more. | He's been informing me on how to teach people to fly for years :-)) | Sorry Jose, but you might at least go out and get the rating and fly | with a few students before telling us how to best do the job. | No flame intended really :-)) | | -- | Dudley Henriques |
#23
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Jim Macklin wrote:
It really is true, 95% [made up number by guess] of flight students who get a rating have learned at least to the 70% level on the knowledge and the practical test is in the 90% skill range of skill, but all rated pilots were seen to be "safe" on the day they got their test and left the instructors nest. But traditional classroom instructor, if judged by the American public schools, fails 80% of the students. "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... | Jim Macklin wrote: | If you read the whole thing, you'll see that I support flying with more than | one instructor, but particularly with a pre-solo student who does not have | the skill or experience to do a TO&L session. But the false expectation and | the bad habits, frustration and even failures that are likely create a | plateau or even a big back-slide. I've seen it happen, all the experienced | instructors have seen it and many students have experienced it. | | At any school, the instructor need to be coordinated and if there is a Chief | Flight Instructor {approved school] they should have procedures in place | just the Henry said previously. | | | | It's no use Jim. I've been dealing with Jose now for years. He seems | absolutely convinced that classroom teachers are WAY ahead of the curve | when it comes to us lowly CFI's :-) I don't think the guy has EVER asked | me a question about flight instruction. He just lectures and lectures | and lectures some more. | He's been informing me on how to teach people to fly for years :-)) | Sorry Jose, but you might at least go out and get the rating and fly | with a few students before telling us how to best do the job. | No flame intended really :-)) | | -- | Dudley Henriques The classroom advocates (not to mean that classroom training isn't an asset by any means ) seem to get booged down in understanding that flight instruction takes place in part at least in a classroom moving at over a hundred or in many cases over two hundred miles an hour. The differences involved in teaching in this dynamic scenario just seems to avoid these people for some reason. To be quite frank, I get a little tired sometimes of being "lectured" by these teachers who have absolutely no concept of what it's like to teach someone to do something correctly at the speed involved with a moving airplane while at the same time keeping the student they are teaching from killing them both in the process :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
#24
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[Jose] seems absolutely convinced that classroom teachers are WAY ahead
.... actually, no. And btw I am not (and never have been) a classroom teacher. The screen name comes from teaching C programming online some years back. I don't think the guy has EVER asked me a question about flight instruction. Actually I have. Several. And I've appreciated the answers. He's been informing me on how to teach people to fly for years My POV is as a student. I know what worked for me, though I will grant that my experience as a flying student is limited. Sorry Jose, but you might at least go out and get the rating It's on my to-do list. Alas, I can't do everything at once and still post to Usenet. ![]() Jose -- You can choose whom to befriend, but you cannot choose whom to love. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#25
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Jose wrote:
[Jose] seems absolutely convinced that classroom teachers are WAY ahead ... actually, no. And btw I am not (and never have been) a classroom teacher. The screen name comes from teaching C programming online some years back. I don't think the guy has EVER asked me a question about flight instruction. Actually I have. Several. And I've appreciated the answers. He's been informing me on how to teach people to fly for years My POV is as a student. I know what worked for me, though I will grant that my experience as a flying student is limited. Sorry Jose, but you might at least go out and get the rating It's on my to-do list. Alas, I can't do everything at once and still post to Usenet. ![]() Jose Well when and if you do, I will be glad to help you in any way I can (if asked) :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
#26
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On 2007-12-25 11:58:42 -0800, Chris L said:
Hello, I know virtually nothing about flying, but am planning on getting a private flying license. I have already talked to a few of the schools in and around the Tukwila/Renton Washington area, and want to know which is the best all around school. Far be it from me to say which flight school is best, but you might want to check us out at PAVCO at Tacoma Narrows in Gig Harbor (I have some loyalty to the place). The bridge toll might get kind of old, though. You have listed some schools that I would avoid on account of their being too impersonal or too expensive. You have also listed some good ones. You might want to check out Auburn, too. So what should I do, Christopher Lusardi P.S.: It's all for fun and remotely work related. But, I can be able to pretend that I will to become an astronaut some day. [[:-)) You should start learning to fly. You will never find the 'best' flight school or instructor, of course. The grass is always greener somewhere else. AFAIK PAVCO is the only local flight school that has actually produced an astronaut. :-) -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#27
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On 2007-12-26 09:24:54 -0800, "Jim Macklin"
said: I'll add one more think, the instructor/student relationship is very personal. Instructors have plan and if a student flies with another instructor who does not follow the principle instructors plan, it is a problem. Often the INSTRUCTOR has a series of step by step lesson plans, concentrating on mastering airwork, turns of all kinds, ground reference maneuvers, airspeed control and is not ready for "landings" yet. The student is happy because they are flying and working hard and learning the basics. But if the instructor is ill and another instructor subs a problem arises. #2 instructor may just say to the student, "You've got 8 hours, so let's stay in the pattern and practice take-offs and landings." This is the thing, though. Too many instructors do nothing except what #2 instructor does -- and so their students never learn to fly. I would say that one of the first things you want to do is ask a potential instructor's other students how closely the instructor follows the syllabus. There are several possible answers: 1) "What syllabus?" An instructor without a syllabus will not teach you to fly. Flee from an instructor who does not use one. 2) "Step by step. If the weather does not allow us to do the next lesson, we cancel." Not as bad as the first, but it will take a long time to finish with this instructor, especially in the Pacific Northwest where the weather is often bad. 3) "We started out using a syllabus, but lately I am just practicing takeoffs and landings. I have 120 landings and I still am not getting it right." You will not get them right, either, if you fly with this instructor. He started out with good intentions, but for some reason he has stopped instructing. He just likes riding in the airplane with his students. 4) "We have a syllabus, but if the weather does not work for a particular lesson, we do something else. If he has a substitute instructor, he follows the syllabus, too." Good instructor with good backup. You can bet he will have you fly with a check instructor from time to time, too, just to confirm his own observations and to make sure you get a fresh point of view. I do not like instructors who are abusive -- an instructor should never use foul language and nearly all of his criticism should be positive. It is better to say "Try keeping your airspeed at 65 knots on final" instead of "Your landings were lousy today," but it is a lot easier for some instructors to say the latter instead of the former. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#28
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C J Campbell wrote:
On 2007-12-26 09:24:54 -0800, "Jim Macklin" said: I'll add one more think, the instructor/student relationship is very personal. Instructors have plan and if a student flies with another instructor who does not follow the principle instructors plan, it is a problem. Often the INSTRUCTOR has a series of step by step lesson plans, concentrating on mastering airwork, turns of all kinds, ground reference maneuvers, airspeed control and is not ready for "landings" yet. The student is happy because they are flying and working hard and learning the basics. But if the instructor is ill and another instructor subs a problem arises. #2 instructor may just say to the student, "You've got 8 hours, so let's stay in the pattern and practice take-offs and landings." This is the thing, though. Too many instructors do nothing except what #2 instructor does -- and so their students never learn to fly. I would say that one of the first things you want to do is ask a potential instructor's other students how closely the instructor follows the syllabus. There are several possible answers: 1) "What syllabus?" An instructor without a syllabus will not teach you to fly. Flee from an instructor who does not use one. 2) "Step by step. If the weather does not allow us to do the next lesson, we cancel." Not as bad as the first, but it will take a long time to finish with this instructor, especially in the Pacific Northwest where the weather is often bad. 3) "We started out using a syllabus, but lately I am just practicing takeoffs and landings. I have 120 landings and I still am not getting it right." You will not get them right, either, if you fly with this instructor. He started out with good intentions, but for some reason he has stopped instructing. He just likes riding in the airplane with his students. 4) "We have a syllabus, but if the weather does not work for a particular lesson, we do something else. If he has a substitute instructor, he follows the syllabus, too." Good instructor with good backup. You can bet he will have you fly with a check instructor from time to time, too, just to confirm his own observations and to make sure you get a fresh point of view. I do not like instructors who are abusive -- an instructor should never use foul language and nearly all of his criticism should be positive. It is better to say "Try keeping your airspeed at 65 knots on final" instead of "Your landings were lousy today," but it is a lot easier for some instructors to say the latter instead of the former. Good instructors ALWAYS, regardless of how the lesson went, end a lesson with a positive note of praise for a student. You NEVER abuse a student or take the lesson into negative territoty. This doesn't mean good CFI's shouldn't criticize or correct. It means that all critiszm and correcting should be done wrapped up in a positive presentation. I can't ever remember letting a student end a lesson feeling despondent or unfulfilled. There's simply no excuse or reason for this ever happening. ALL student instruction should be positive instruction. If the student screws something up, any good instructor should be able to deal with it on a positive basis and without making a student feel bad in any way. I'd fire a flight instructor working for me in a heartbeat for approaching flight instruction in any other way than what CJ and I have both commented on here. -- Dudley Henriques |
#29
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On Dec 26, 1:04*pm, Christopher Brian Colohan
wrote: "Bob Gardner" writes: If you want to get more insight than that...and you should...both ASA, Gleim, and the Kings have DVD courses. The King courses have "more insight"? *Oh wow. *Those travelling courses must be really really shallow -- because when I went through the King private pilot DVDs I was constantly frustrated by how little explanation there was besides "the FAA wants you to know that..." Chris Where can I get the King and Gleim DVD courses, www.airnav.com does not have them. I have : Virtual Test Prep an Aviation Ground School Bonus! Start Flying! DVD Included Private 08 Pilot Study and Prepare for the Airplane Private Pilot FAA Knowledge Exam Thank you, Christopher Lusardi |
#30
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Chris L writes:
Where can I get the King and Gleim DVD courses, www.airnav.com does not have them. http://www.kingschools.com/ http://www.gleim.com/ Chris |
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