- Joined
- Feb 23, 2005
- Messages
- 11,188
- Location
- Lone Jack, MO
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Display name:
Greg Bockelman
All I have to say is I am glad I am not doing this today and I will NEVER willingly let my CFI expire!
All I have to say is I am glad I am not doing this today and I will NEVER willingly let my CFI expire!
All I have to say is I am glad I am not doing this today and I will NEVER willingly let my CFI expire!
Pretty much exactly the same way, except I don’t think you have to address Private/Commercial ACSs, only Sport Pilot.Is anybody reading this thread a Sport Pilot CFI? How does that ride go? I've been wanting to go that route in the next few years.
Is anybody reading this thread a Sport Pilot CFI? How does that ride go? I've been wanting to go that route in the next few years.
There are so few LS students and so few LS rentals available I don’t why you would put forward the the effort...
I have neither the desire nor the cash to get my instrument and commercial ratings, and the local FBO has a J-3 but not enough instructors. It would also give the opportunity to do transition training in student owned light experimentals, as I recently did and enjoyed (informally and for free) in the student's new Quicksilver.
Also there's a very good chance that the LSA minimums will be expanded in the next few years to include a lot more aircraft.
Does Gold Seal have any resources for learning, memorizing, correlating the Instructor knowledge items such as the FOI Material?It's been about 20 years and I don't remember exactly what I was asked to teach, but I did have some fairly fancy PowerPoint lessons all set up and ready to go. The examiner really liked that a lot. Actually, that was what evolved into the business I'm in today (although we don't use PowerPoint anymore).
Dude. I just posted over in Medical Topics why I might be done with flying but I’ll STILL make sure to renew the damn CFI until I’m dead.
Redoing those check-rides would be a major pain In the ass.
But I’m glad they’re hard. It’s an important ride and important that we at least try to make sure people know how serious it is.
But I’ll be trying to do the online renewal or get to an in person one no matter what. Ha. I don’t want to prep that hard ever again!
Hahahaha. Okay. I’d do it if I HAD to. Can’t fly the flight right now anyway so that would be the end of that. Sigh.
Being a good pilot is less important than being a good teacher. Your job as an instructor is to transfer knowledge.
Ok, you guys are correct. You must be a good+ pilot. Poor choice of wording on my part. But being a good+ pilot does not make one a good+ instructor. That requires being a good+ teacher. There is a lot more to being a flight instructor than demonstrating maneuvers.
Questions for our CFIs old and new.
- When sitting for your oral exams, what lessons were you asked to teach?
- How “in depth” were you expected to go?
- How did you teach the lesson?
- What critiques and feedback did the examiner provide?
- What pointers do you have for future candidates to make the teaching part of the oral exam go smoothly?
- Does Levy’s #2 pencil still apply to the CFI initial? Or are you expected to go a level or two deeper on the knowledge items?
At one point, he stopped me, disgruntled. I assumed I had botched something.
He asked "Where would you go to buy a camera tripod?"
I answered "Best Buy"
"Okay, come on. Don't stop talking."
I can picture the video montage of him going into Best Buy, making his purchase, exiting, going to Starbucks for coffee, the grocery store for the weekly comestibles, and Blockbuster for the DVD, with you all the while just behind him rattling off aviation knowledge.He asked "Where would you go to buy a camera tripod?"
I answered "Best Buy"
"Okay, come on. Don't stop talking."
I wouldn’t hold my breath on expansion of LSA minimums. As much as EAA etal are pushing this, the public comment period will be brutal with some players coming out against LSA expansion that you don’t expect.
Sorta like Bubba telling Forest all the ways to cook shrimp.
I think the Jive Translator webpage still works...... I might just try and shove a flight lesson through it and see what comes out the other sideI concur with the exclusive use of correct and accurate terminology. Slang begets slang and you end up with gibberish...
I think the Jive Translator webpage still works...... I might just try and shove a flight lesson through it and see what comes out the other side
Now that would be super funny....If you do get @SixPapaCharlie to make a video of the resulting flight lesson! LOL.
8 hours start to finish with 20 min for lunch. From what I remember (it was in April 2000), with a stone breaker of an examiner from the Philly FSDO. We went deep into the weeds and I almost washed myself out by talking too much. Remember "Dragnet"? Just the facts, focused on the level of expertise of the student.
Notebook? Absolutely. Dissect every maneuver in your mind, build a plan around it, and put it in a binder. Instructional knowledge, you have to know it. And it does impress the examiner if he throws you a "come up with a lesson plan for X" and you flip to the page in your binder with your plan built around how you would teach it.
Little things work in your favor too. I did the shirt-and-tie thing (it IS a professional-grade certificate, look the part even if you will be giving training in jeans and a polo.). Had printed up business cards and gave one to the examiner when I introduced myself.
References. The FAA types liked to see the AC versions of THEIR handbooks; Jeppesen and CPC books are great teaching aids. The Feds use the handbooks. Play to their preferences.
One thing that has stuck in my mind all these years later (and the examiner did relate that I was one of the 20% he passes on the first go around...like I said, a stone breaker of an examiner...) was that I'd be OK if I just "remind myself every 20 seconds this student is trying to kill me". Hasn't happened yet, but I still mouth it silently to myself from time to time with some of the students I've had.
My II was a lot easier. But then I had 18 months of experience under my belt, and the II ride was with a DPE who I had flown with for my Commercial and had a good rep as a great stick, total pro (he retired the day before my II ride from American after a 30 year career), and just really a nice guy. I still have his notes for both my commercial and II ride in my logbook case.
The challenge to a plan like that is trying to keep up with all the avionics so that you can give competent instruction. It's very difficult to do as an independent CFI. I'm guessing back in the of dual VORs and DME it wasn't as hard.
The challenge to a plan like that is trying to keep up with all the avionics so that you can give competent instruction. It's very difficult to do as an independent CFI. I'm guessing back in the of dual VORs and DME it wasn't as hard.
What avionics? For primary instruction a transponder, a single nav comm and basic 6 pack instruments is all that is needed.
The challenge to a plan like that is trying to keep up with all the avionics so that you can give competent instruction. It's very difficult to do as an independent CFI. I'm guessing back in the of dual VORs and DME it wasn't as hard.