Even as a student pilot I never used 'student pilot'(or learner) on the radio. I feel like I missed out on something...
It’s not too late to start. A good pilot is always learning, y’know.
Even as a student pilot I never used 'student pilot'(or learner) on the radio. I feel like I missed out on something...
Neither did I nor any of my students. I always treated the call as something to be used as needed. OTOH, I was once flying and heard a pilot say "student pilot" in every single readback, evenEven as a student pilot I never used 'student pilot'(or learner) on the radio. I feel like I missed out on something...
I still use the Summit aviation CD.
It's now a download rather than a CD.I think I'm most impressed that you still have a computer with a functioning CD drive!
This is actually making me want to figure out where this "learner pilot" business started. I actually have no idea and not even a guess as to why.
As for the rationale: “The change from student to learner started several years ago in an industry working group,” he said. “Industry wanted to get away from using the word ‘student’ because traditionally we think of student as in ‘student pilot’ or a beginning student pilot/mechanic.”
Thank goodness I have never heard of a flight school that required (or even seriously suggested) anyone other than a holder of a student pilot certificate (let alone an ATP candidate) use the phrase with ATC.In all seriousness, it probably went more that someone went to a flight school to become an ATP after having already been issued a cert. However, the school required the person to still use "Student Pilot" as a standard call
My primary instructor told me to use the "student pilot" call when I took my first solo xc (to Peoria!). I naively thought that if I told CMI when I got flight following, they would somehow pass that information to PIA. PIA tower then, assuming I knew what I was doing, sequenced me tight in front of a CRJ, which then had to go around. I'll never forget that. In my defense, I flew the plane normally, and she shouldn't have made me #1, but In hindsight there was an unspoken "I'm making you #1, keep it tight" that went right over the head of this "learner".Say again?
Say again all after . . .
My 14th primary instructor (1992 - I was 18 at the time) yelled at me for saying student pilot at the end of my transmission with Peoria Approach. He told me how embarrassing it was and to NEVER use it with him onboard and only in an emergency if he wasn't onboard.
I honestly think that is dumb. You do you. If you are more comfortable saying student pilot, say it.
If you said "learner pilot" I (I'm not a controller) would assume you were a foreign trained pilot or something because that isn't standard phraseology. To me, that reflects poorly on your instructor(s) because you are presumably solo and using incorrect terminology.
My $0.02.
EVERY SINGLE (or married) PILOT YOU WILL MEET STARTED AS A STUDENT PILOT!!!! Every one of us. Not something to be ashamed of.
Don't act like you have experience you haven't yet earned. You miss a lot of learning that way.
Long before this silliness, I was trying to figure out how to refer to those who do recurrent training with me. Whenever I talked about a "student," at least 90% - pilots and non-pilots alike - assumed I was talking about someone brand new to flying. I went through through "flight client" ("client" alone means something special in context), "trainee," and a few others. I don't use "learner" and won't even consider it. I think it's silly and pretty meaningless. But I accept the basic premise that the unmodified word, "student " is typically understood to be someone who holds a student pilot certificate (or none at all) without having to use 5,000 year old biases against youth. I think that's true more broadly than aviation. That's why we have been referring to "college student," "grad student," etc. for many, many years.My primary instructor told me to use the "student pilot" call when I took my first solo xc (to Peoria!). I naively thought that if I told CMI when I got flight following, they would somehow pass that information to PIA. PIA tower then, assuming I knew what I was doing, sequenced me tight in front of a CRJ, which then had to go around. I'll never forget that. In my defense, I flew the plane normally, and she shouldn't have made me #1, but I'm hindsight there was an unspoken "I'm making you #1, keep it tight" that went right over the head of this "learner".
I think @Racerx nailed the reasoning.... some puppy mill instrument student got called that and took offense because he's "NOT a 'student pilot'!". Because we no longer teach kids to deal with the slightest bit of being offended (that's called a micro- aggression now), we have to change the language.
As to whether ATC would understand "learner"....I bet it would confuse them, but you'd still get the "watch this guy, he might be an idiot" handling you're looking for
....I was trying to figure out how to refer to those who do recurrent training with me.....
Pilot Under Instruction, pronounced "poo-ey."
edit: or maybe 'Duallist'
Nauga,
and a title, a callsign, and a style of flying
I'm sure there are those who feel that way"unfortunate soul" ?
I kid, I kid.....
Now you've done it! Supported the term "learner"!It’s a “license to learn”, so aren’t we ALL students?
students study and learners learn.
Sound like somebody had too much time on their hands.I found this:
https://www.aacsb.edu/insights/articles/2020/07/developing-learners-vs-teaching-students
Throughout these new standards, the word “student” has been replaced with “learner.” This is a trend throughout academe, and one basic rationale for the change is simple: students study and learners learn.
What do you call inner outrage?
students study and learners learn.
But at least now we know the FAA isn't behind as many think. They're on the cutting edge!Sound like somebody had too much time on their hands.
Maybe the should change the "student pilot certificate" into a "learner's permit"?Your green plastic card does not say “Learner Pilot”.
Maybe the should change the "student pilot certificate" into a "learner's permit"?
“Student” is sexist…the root is “stud”.
As to whether ATC would understand "learner"....I bet it would confuse them, but you'd still get the "watch this guy, he might be an idiot" handling you're looking for
The FAA wordsmithed a couple of non-directive documents. The change didn't affect they way any of us should be operating.Only the FAA is pushing the change from student to learner. When I am sitting around the office with other CFIs, we talk about students, not learners.
If I was ATC and some jackwggon used the term "learner pilot" I would make sure in the next transmission they understood how little they had "learned" up to that point!
As a pilot I would be silently judging you through the radio.
You gotta be kidding me....
In Florida, just adopt a heavy foreign accent and they'll assume you are a puppy mill flyer.
Gotta hand it to them, though. I speak a couple of foreign languages, and I cannot fathom trying to deal with ATC in them.