If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
Hey CJ, is 'verticalreference' yours or am I mistaken?
PJ |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
"PJ Hunt" wrote in message ... Hey CJ, is 'verticalreference' yours or am I mistaken? What is that? |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
"PJ Hunt" wrote in message ... Hey CJ, is 'verticalreference' yours or am I mistaken? Oh, I see. Are you talking about Ray Madrid's helicopter web site? If so, I have never flown in a helicopter and never heard of verticalreference before today. Looks interesting, though. |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
On Mon, 08 Nov 2004 16:46:47 GMT, "Dudley Henriques"
wrote: "doc" wrote in message ... are awfully hard to find. I just "interviewed" a couple at local flight schools by taking little flights with them, ostensibly just for rust removal. snip Bottom line.....in your quest for a GOOD instructor......be aware........be advised.......and be alert. Observe the whole picture. Then when you're certain you have considered it all, make your decision. I'm just passing this on to you because I've seen many a mistake made by students going into these things with preconception. Not to say that preconception isn't a good idea...it is. But it also has to be tempered and flexible to be an effective tool. In my rather limited experience I think there are a lot of good instructors out there. Sure, there are some that aren't, but I think it is as important that the instructor and student personalities are compatible. It takes a good match of a number of characteristics for the teaching and learning procedure to proceed at the best possible pace. We now have close to 8 or 9 instructors on the field. None are full time, all have "other jobs", all teach because they want to, and all have pretty good success ratios. OTOH you can find students that will swear by any particular instructor and you will find those they sear at. We even have one who was recently banned from the field because the inexperienced person working in the terminal building got scared watching them do emergency procedures and wrote them up. (long story) I'd still fly with him any day and I'd be surprised that the lawyers don't get him back on the field soon. OTOH we have an award winning instructor with whom I refuse to fly. It's more of a personality/ethics thing, but that person is known as a good instructor. We had a husband and wife team take some mountain flying dual out in the Rocky Mountains this Summer. They flew with an instructor for not much over an hour each and each had to switch instructors. He has quite a few students, but as experienced pilots, his teaching style was one of those that grated the wrong way. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Best of luck in your quest, Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship for email; take out the trash |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
"Peter MacPherson" wrote in message news:dBLkd.496080$mD.366210@attbi_s02...
Owning a plane and flying it all over the place is one way to get this experience. Flying 135 could be another. Agreed, but instructors can also fly "all over the place" with their students. Like someone else said, the x-c's don't have to be 1000 miles to get good wx experience. I 100% disagree with that. You just don't run into the situation of real world cross country weather in the training environment. You aren't crossing weather fronts very often and you aren't flying long enough that forcasts get old. You just aren't crossing enough weather boundries on little 200nm training flights. Having lived in both environments, I really see a difference between flying 200nm around your "back yard weather" and flying around the country experiences other pilots' "back yard weather". A lot of part 135 pilots don't tend to fly very far. As another example, Cape Air which flies from Boston to the Islands(Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard) and other short hops, probably have some of the best wx pilots around. They fly through all New England wx....fog, ice, etc.. and they probably never fly more than 150 miles. So if these pilots are able to get this experience (difference in equipment noted) why do instructors need to be going "all over the place" to give their students some great wx experience? They fly in pretty predictable weather. They know when and where the ice will come. If they were flying some longer cross countries they would experience a different type of weather that they would be less equipt to predict. I don't agree that with teaching you either have it or not. I think if you have the aptitude, over time you become a better teacher every day you teach. I doubt that the best teachers you know were that good on their first day because "they had it". That may be true but I've never actually seen it work that way. Some people have the patients and personality to teach adults and some people don't. I've never seen a poor teacher because a good teacher. I've seen a poor teacher become on okay teacher. -robert |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
I just recently talked to a CFI about doing a BFR and during the
conversation he stated that his " job " would be to stress me out. You know cross wind landings etc. Here where I live CFI,s are rather limited. I sure didn,t think that was the way to begin a student/Instructor relationship!!! Aloha, Les Ward doc wrote: are awfully hard to find. I just "interviewed" a couple at local flight schools by taking little flights with them, ostensibly just for rust removal. There's no way I'd hire them for instrument training. It is tough to find an instructor who really knows his stuff, is a good teacher and is congenial enough that I'd be willing to spend 10's of hours in a cockpit with him/her. Just an observation. I don't expect anyone to have a solution. |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
I just recently talked to a CFI about doing a BFR and during the
conversation he stated that his " job " would be to stress me out. I would politely shake his hand and tell him that he is not the kind of instructor that you prefer for any kind of instructions or BFR. To me he sounds like he should take some training in being an instructior. Hank 172 driver |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
|
#39
|
|||
|
|||
Y'All,
One thing I do about instruction for as certain as I can be about anything is... A good instructor knows best of all what he can't teach. |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
In article et, Gene Whitt wrote: Y'All, One thing I do about instruction for as certain as I can be about anything is... A good instructor knows best of all what he can't teach. You can't teach what you don't know. Paradoxically, you never learn a subject as well as when you try to teach it to someone else. Morris |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
Are pilots really good or just lucky??? | Icebound | Instrument Flight Rules | 68 | December 9th 04 01:53 PM |
Good Stories about Plane Purchases | Jon Kraus | Owning | 0 | August 11th 04 01:20 PM |
Good Source For PIREPS? | Phoenix Pilot | Instrument Flight Rules | 3 | August 25th 03 03:59 AM |
Commander gives Navy airframe plan good review | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | July 8th 03 09:10 PM |