I think training in a more real environment would be better than the CFI saying, "let's do a soft field landing." I've only landed once on a soft field and I don't have that same feeling when I do it on concrete. Maybe it's not critical that I get the feeling of being on grass or dirt or the rocks that I actually landed on but I agree that creating the scenario would be better than just asking for the maneuver. I would appreciate my instructor just saying pretend we're going to a fly-in at a small airport that has a grass strip....
Another thing one of the CFI's does to me is asks me point blank questions and sometimes I don't know exactly what he's referring to. I ask for a little clarifications sometimes but when I'm doing a steep turn I don't have time to "discuss." Let's just say I'm watching trying to keep the plane headed at altitude and watching the CDI some and the instructor asks me what kind of cloud that is. I've looked at them with no particular interest since I'm not flying there and I see a bunch of different types as I look in the general location of his head position. Well, the low clouds I identify as nimbus. He says, yes, but the other ones. I say I see cirrus up higher. He says yes, but the other one. Geez, then he says what are those lens shaped clouds. G-damn, ok, why didn't you ask something in a better way. How about, you see those lenticular clouds (I passed the written with a 95 so I've been through the ground school course), he could have just asked if we were to fly below them or near them what kind of wind effects might we expect?
Anyway, I agree. There should be more situational instruction....apparently like the kind the DE is going to give me.