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#7
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(reply crossposted to rec.aviation.student)
Michael's post is spot on. Personal recommendations are the only way to go. I asked a similar question a year ago and got mostly similar answers about interviewing a bunch of instructors etc, but I didn't find that advice helpful. Has anyone here actually tried it? I'm sure it can be pulled off by a sufficiently charismatic person, but for me it felt socially awkward in the extreme. Also, if you're looking for that elusive retired guy teaching for the love of it, you're not going to find him/her in the yellow pages. I went through three instructors in my first three hours (two greenhorn time-builders and a crotchety guy who couldn't teach), decided at over $100 a shot I was throwing away my money, and quit. A year and a half later on a whim I sent an e-mail in the blind to the author of an online aviation site (a nuclear physicist by trade) asking if he by chance knew an instructor in my area he could personally recommend. He said no but passed me on to a local pilot/acro instructor in the area (himself a nationally prominent professor of computer science by trade) who in turn recommended a woman who is actually a flight instructor by trade. It turns out she is excellent, and one of her two greenhorn apprentices is not bad at all, and I'm doing a much better job of learning with them. (Elaine Heston, Aeroexecutive Services, inc. at Rostraver Airport south of Pittsburgh, 724-379-4722) It turns out if I had asked around the local EAA chapter I would have found the same woman as half of them are her students, but the couple local pilots I knew at the time didn't have any personal recommendations to make. So, to sum up, the approach that worked for me was to first find a prominent local pilot (or group) well keyed-in to the local instructor scene, and ask that person or people for personal recommendations. The hard problem is not comparing the instructors you find against each other, but rather finding any instructor at all who stands out as good. Certainly blowing a couple hundred dollars on bad instructors helped me to recognize a keeper.... ~Adam Michael wrote: Is it really "buyer beware" ? It is to a large extent. Having a flight instructor certificate assures a certain minimum standard, but it's very minimal. The best advice I can give you is this - figure out the sort of pilot you want to be in five or ten years (meet the pilots based at your airport to get an idea) and then ask THAT pilot to choose your instructor. He already has a pretty good idea of what to look for - you don't. It's a matter of perspective. By the time you've figured out how to choose a good instructor, it's not so useful. Michael |
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