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#1
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Flight training duration vs best lessons frequency, pace and quality.
Need advice what is best for student pilot. What is better, getting license fast, or to take your time, to enjoy longer, to do it slower? The situation. Basic glider flight training on tow including 10 solo flights. Flat terrain, no ridge, weather is no problem. Student and instructor live near airfield. There is no rush, time is no problem. The questions 1. What is the best frequency of flying lessons, how many flights per day, per week, per month? 4 flights per day? 4 flights per week? How many flights would you recommend per day or per week and why? 2. Should full training including 10 solo flights be completed in 2 weeks, or 1, or 2, or 3 months, what is the best and the most enjoyable for the student? 3. What is optimal training program on tow, minimum, average, maximum number of dual flights before solo, what the release altitude should be, what the duration of each flight should be etc? 4. Is there any program available for each flight-lesson for teaching on tow from start to solo and beyond? 5. What is the best glider for teaching gliding on tow? Andre |
#3
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You must mean twice a week, with at least two flights a day.
That would represent a normal club weekend. I hope that is the case. Udo It has been my experience that people starting gliding 'from scratch' generally progress best if they fly at least every two weeks. Less frequent flying will generally result in much slower progress. |
#4
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I am talking about maximizing pleasure of flying, maximizing what
student will get out of each flight, maximizing progress of student in process of learning. Does it make sense to give a student 4 flights in one day, or is it better to have one lesson every 2-3 days? (airport operates every day of the week) Should the student be given 1-2 days time to digest each flight, think about it, and analyze it? When weather gets good again after 5 days of rain should this student be allowed to make 3-4 flights in one day, or is it wasting of his money because he does not have time to digest or analyze his experiences, and his progress may suffer? Based on our experience is it better for the student who loves flying very much to do the course in 2 weeks time (5-7 flights a day), or is it better to do the same course in 3 months ( 15 flights per month). If you are 18, have limited money, just enough to prepay the course, would you then fly intensely for 2 weeks or would you want to enjoy 3 months metered flying just to make it last longer. What is better for the student? What is the best frequency of flying lessons? Andre |
#5
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Hi Andre.
I said 4 flights per weekend. In any case I am not an expert on flight training. 38 year ago I received my private power ticket. I just looked it up, it took two Month, well actually three, we could not fly due to very bad January in the middle of a Canadian Winter. My glider endorsement took 12 flights and three weekends. I spend a lot of time on the flight line that Summer. I observed, the new Students could not get enough training flights. (they wanted more then 2 flights a day). I also noted, that the students that flew only once a day and came back a week later never quite got it and fell by the way side in the end. Udo wrote in message oups.com... I am talking about maximizing pleasure of flying, maximizing what student will get out of each flight, maximizing progress of student in process of learning. Does it make sense to give a student 4 flights in one day, or is it better to have one lesson every 2-3 days? (airport operates every day of the week) Should the student be given 1-2 days time to digest each flight, think about it, and analyze it? When weather gets good again after 5 days of rain should this student be allowed to make 3-4 flights in one day, or is it wasting of his money because he does not have time to digest or analyze his experiences, and his progress may suffer? Based on our experience is it better for the student who loves flying very much to do the course in 2 weeks time (5-7 flights a day), or is it better to do the same course in 3 months ( 15 flights per month). If you are 18, have limited money, just enough to prepay the course, would you then fly intensely for 2 weeks or would you want to enjoy 3 months metered flying just to make it last longer. What is better for the student? What is the best frequency of flying lessons? Andre |
#6
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I am talking about maximizing pleasure of flying, maximizing what student will get out of each flight, maximizing progress of student in process of learning. Generally, quicker is better. Repetition improves retention. Rapid progress is very motivating. Does it make sense to give a student 4 flights in one day, or is it better to have one lesson every 2-3 days? (airport operates every day of the week) Should the student be given 1-2 days time to digest each flight, think about it, and analyze it? Yes, they should be given time to digest, and reflect. To imagine what they would do differantly, next time. Judgement is better once you are on the ground, hindsight is 20/20. This is very important, and is the primary obstacle to "Quicker is better". How long? Depends on the student, and their outside workload. 4 flights a day? Perhaps, with a quick student, long days, nothing else going on, and simple flights. 2 might be closer to optimum. 3 days between flights? Not if you can help it. 3 flights a week minimum. When weather gets good again after 5 days of rain should this student be allowed to make 3-4 flights in one day, or is it wasting of his money because he does not have time to digest or analyze his experiences, and his progress may suffer? Once again, depends on the student. In the review after each flight, you'll get a good idea of the progress being made. As soon as you see errors being repeated, give them a break. Based on our experience is it better for the student who loves flying very much to do the course in 2 weeks time (5-7 flights a day), or is it better to do the same course in 3 months ( 15 flights per month). You've bracketed the productive range well. If you are 18, have limited money, just enough to prepay the course, would you then fly intensely for 2 weeks or would you want to enjoy 3 months metered flying just to make it last longer. What is better for the student? What is the best frequency of flying lessons? Andre When you fly a busy schedule, you use the things you have studied, and this helps memory. The ability to recall all of the things you studied makes the entire process less frustrating and more rewarding. You don't spend a lot of time reviewing things covered earlier. These things all help training, make it more rewarding and less expensive in the long run. On the other hand, if the student has not had time to do the fully prepare for the next flight, a delay could be beneficial. Before each lesson, the instructor and student should know exactly where they are going, and what they are going to do. They should have discussed what happend last time they tried to do it, and what should be done differantly. If a new task is being introduced, the student should have an idea, if not be able to explain in detail, what he is going to try to do, how he will do it, and what to expect. Sleep is important. Your brain does some kind of processing/filing on all of your recent experiences while you sleep. 4 very informative flights per day may well be to much. I'll generally spot problems and fix them quicker the next morning. Al CFIAMI 2000+ hours of dual given. |
#7
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Udo Rumpf wrote:
You must mean twice a week, with at least two flights a day. That would represent a normal club weekend. I hope that is the case. Udo It has been my experience that people starting gliding 'from scratch' generally progress best if they fly at least every two weeks. Less frequent flying will generally result in much slower progress. You misunderstood me. By going flying every two weeks I meant being at the airfield every two weeks, which at our club means a sequence of flights (possibly half a dozen - depends on where a student is 'at'). Certainly, most people will progress faster if they attend and fly more frequently, but that is up to the student to decide: gliding needs to fit into their life and I cannot make that choice for them. -- Robert Hart +61 (0)438 385 533 http://www.hart.wattle.id.au |
#8
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... snip The situation. Basic glider flight training on tow including 10 solo flights. Clarification please. Student has 10 solo flights? or wants to train to level to perform 10 solo flights? |
#9
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There is one student and one instructor.
The student took gliding theory course, than he prepaid whole practical course which includes min. 30 dual flights on tow to 500m, than he has to make 10 solo flighst on tow to complete training required to get 3 seagulls badge of glider pilot. The conditions are perfect, 18 years old student has summer vacation, student and instructor have unlimited time for each other, Both live 5 minutes from airport , open every day, weather is good, they have choice how often to fly. Million-dollar question is: at what frequency student should fly for BEST RESULTS and MOST PLEASURE. (Since we do it only once in our life, should we make it last and do it in 2 months, not in 10 days?) They can do required 30+10 flights in 10 days, or they can do the same thing in 3 months doing about 15 flights per month, that is one flight every other day. I am asking what is best for the student, what is the best frequency of flying lessons. Is it one flight every other day? One flight every day? two flights every day? two flights every other day? four flights every day ?? Etc... What is best? Another question. If there is a plateau in learning, how many days break from flying do you recommend, or how to deal with that problem? Andre |
#10
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Hi Andre,
Long time no see! I think it is a simple answer. It think it really depends upon the student. One answer does not fit all students. If the instructor knows the student, you might ask the instructor. You might also get input from one of the students academic teachers, combine that with some knowledge of the young man's coordination and motivation. My guess is that if it is the "MOST PLEASURE", it will also be the "BEST RESULTS". If you know him, what is your guess? If you love him, trust your heart. mg wrote: There is one student and one instructor. The student took gliding theory course, than he prepaid whole practical course which includes min. 30 dual flights on tow to 500m, than he has to make 10 solo flighst on tow to complete training required to get 3 seagulls badge of glider pilot. The conditions are perfect, 18 years old student has summer vacation, student and instructor have unlimited time for each other, Both live 5 minutes from airport , open every day, weather is good, they have choice how often to fly. Million-dollar question is: at what frequency student should fly for BEST RESULTS and MOST PLEASURE. (Since we do it only once in our life, should we make it last and do it in 2 months, not in 10 days?) They can do required 30+10 flights in 10 days, or they can do the same thing in 3 months doing about 15 flights per month, that is one flight every other day. I am asking what is best for the student, what is the best frequency of flying lessons. Is it one flight every other day? One flight every day? two flights every day? two flights every other day? four flights every day ?? Etc... What is best? Another question. If there is a plateau in learning, how many days break from flying do you recommend, or how to deal with that problem? Andre |
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