unsafervguy
En-Route
No child left behind, gold stars for all, everybody gets a participation trophy....
In aviation, those that strive for a participation award are called statistics.
No child left behind, gold stars for all, everybody gets a participation trophy....
sounds like my CS courses.Since I don't teach for a living I tell students upfront, I do not spoon feed. If you are not prepared it shows me you do not have the passion to fly, and fly safely. I'm out of there, I will explain forever something they don't understand as long as they are putting in the effort to learn, but if they are just trying to get by, so long.
"Love" charging ground time? You make it sound like those who do charge for ground time are trying to get every dollar we can out of our clients. You can't make a statement like that without expecting a response.
I don't "love" charging ground time any more than any other; I charge for my time. My time is worth the same to me whether I'm in the airplane or not. I charge in 15-minute increments and generally round down. What we flew in the airplane is irrelevant for that purpose. It keeps the math easy. Note that all my clients are flying their own airplanes and paying me directly, it is not going through a school or anything like that.
Like I said, it's not just teaching aviation. These days, it's any topic. 29 students started my CS 2 class (2nd semester for CS majors). 12 quit by the end of the 2nd week. 2 don't come to class, don't do the homework, don't take the exams. 15 took the final this morning, but half of those will likely fail.The OP statements are why I think I am done instructing after many years. I find students now want things spoon fed to them. I usually assign blocks of questions they take home to work on. I explain all the answers can be found in all the books I have suggested they buy, and that they even spent money on. But when it comes time to review the answers. I can tell right away they just google the question and get a quick answer. I explain that they need to have an understanding of the information, not just have an answer that they really don't know what it means. I tell them "go home, read A, B, C, any questions or anything you don't quite understand we will go over when we meet again". I find they never read anything, can't answer anything I ask them about the topics. It is where student pilots want to get their license like a drivers license. I tell them we can sit for hours upon hours and go step by step in the information that needs to be learned, and I will make a lot of money doing that if that's what they choose. I really don't have the patience or motivation to spend 60 to 80 hours ground on a student. I have high standards when it comes to my students, I expect them to take the time to study and learn. I am not there to hold their hand. I am their to teach them. But I find most students are lazy about it now. Sad part is, I am hearing this from many instructors that I am friends with across the country.
I am done instructing after many years. I find students now want things spoon fed to them (snip) sad part is, I am hearing this from many instructors that I am friends with across the country.
Like I said, it's not just teaching aviation. These days, it's any topic. 29 students started my CS 2 class (2nd semester for CS majors). 12 quit by the end of the 2nd week. 2 don't come to class, don't do the homework, don't take the exams. 15 took the final this morning, but half of those will likely fail.
"QUOTE="mscard88, post: 2419612, member: 26582"]It's ironic people think a CFI is milking a student charging for ground. I'm sure there are some that do but vast majority don't.
24% completion rate is pretty grim.Like I said, it's not just teaching aviation. These days, it's any topic. 29 students started my CS 2 class (2nd semester for CS majors). 12 quit by the end of the 2nd week. 2 don't come to class, don't do the homework, don't take the exams. 15 took the final this morning, but half of those will likely fail.
welcome to computer science, data structures & alorithms at the university.24% completion rate is pretty grim.
welcome to computer science, data structures & alorithms at the university.
Think that's bad? Across the board, at all universities across the country (other than MIT and Caltech) only 10% of those who enter as CS majors graduate with CS degrees. This semester we had 9 sections of CS1. This coming semester, only 3 sections of CS2.
Have you considered majoring in Art History?
Though things are getting more and more Hamburger Helper by the day...
Actually, I did the BSCS.welcome to computer science, data structures & alorithms at the university.
Think that's bad? Across the board, at all universities across the country (other than MIT and Caltech) only 10% of those who enter as CS majors graduate with CS degrees. This semester we had 9 sections of CS1. This coming semester, only 3 sections of CS2.
Have you considered majoring in Art History?
Lasagna- my fav.Cheeseburger macaroni variety, please! nomnomnomnom.
I was an especially poor (read: lazy) college student. ****ed away a few thousand at a degree I didn't belong in. Few years pass and I'm no longer eligible for federal aid. Transitioned to another program but couldn't finish due to my pocket having emptied itself and my current situation.I remember in grade school I would be sitting in class shaking like a leaf because I knew the teacher was about to collect our homework and I hadn’t completed mine. Sometimes it was because I forgot, but more often than not, I just chose not to do it. Typically, this was because the subject didn’t interest me and I didn’t appreciate its importance. In actuality, I guess I was just a typical adolescent.
As a flight instructor I am now on the opposite side of the fence. I am the teacher and my flight customers are my students. I am the one handing out homework, and I have to be honest, when a student doesn’t complete an assignment it is puzzling and confusing. This training is an endeavor they chose, it’s one they have obvious interest in, and they are clearly no longer a rebellious whipper-snapper. Further, the importance of the information cannot be understated and this is training they are directly paying for.
The reason for this post is an effort to assist students in understanding the importance of completing and comprehending the study materials we assign before a flight lesson.
As you probably have discovered, each lesson has a learning objective and an aviation skill to hone. Typically, we ask that you read a related chapter in a textbook or watch a relevant video, plan a cross country, or complete a navigation log prior to a flight. The efficacy of the flight exercise we are about to engage in would be significantly hobbled if you did not prepare in advance. Moreover, each flight lesson is a building block which supports each subsequent lesson to come. Without proper study, the house we are attempting to build is being forged on a very weak foundation.
When an aircraft is scheduled, it is usually for only 2 hours or so and let’s break down a typical encounter:
After the usual pleasantries and small talk 10 to 15 minutes pass. The instructor knows that there will be significant time spent walking out to the plane, performing a pre-flight, calling for fuel, adding oil, completing checklists, starting-up, warming-up, running-up, taxiing and flying to the practice area…so he or she looks at their watch, closes their eyes and inquires with trepidation…
“…ok, so, did you read the chapter I assigned which covered Sectional Charts and emergencies procedures?”
The student is caught off guard by the question and begins a sheepish apology of:
“Ah, yea…I ah…well… sort of…I mean I ah.… you know...might of missed a little…or some…you know…basically all of it.”
It is now clear the quality of the lesson is compromised. The instructor won’t reprimand the student, send them to the principal’s office or demand penance, but trust me, the sentence is close at hand!
Now, instead of just a 5 or 10 minute synopsis of the lesson plan, the instructor must give a 90 minute lecture compressed into a hasty 30 to 40 minute oration of the subject matter.
This student arrived at the airport with the excitement of flight, but unfortunately they just deprived themselves of precious air time. They are now ground-bound, forced into self-inflicted atonement for the sins of educational neglect. They are sentenced to sit in a windowless classroom and listen to a middle-aged man droning on about some topic on a beautiful Saturday morning…one with the Sun bright, the sky blue, the winds calm and an aircraft beckoning from its tie-down. For pity’s sake, I beg you to avoid putting yourself in this position!
There is so much more to becoming a pilot than stick and rudder skills. You are going to need extensive knowledge of aerodynamics, the weather, aircraft systems, cross-country planning, ATC communications, FAA regulations, aeronautical charts, the POH, and the list goes on. It is for pity’s sake that I implore you to study your assigned material before for the scheduled flight.
Escape the mindset that it is only your job to show up, sit inertly at a desk while an instructor pours knowledge into your head. This attitude is deeply flawed, because becoming a safe and knowledgeable aviator is not a passive activity…it is an active process; you and only you must take charge, take the initiative and take command of your learning.
After solo, the instructor’s role transitions from teacher, to evaluator, to passenger, to peer. Therefore, take ownership of each flight!
In closing, your instructor will always be there as your mentor, your guide and your most dedicated supporter, but understand it remains your responsibility and it benefits only you to complete required assignments, to comprehend the material, to show up prepared, and to ask relevant questions.
Gene Wentzel, ATP, CFII
When an aircraft is scheduled, it is usually for only 2 hours or so and let’s break down a typical encounter:
I remember in grade school I would be sitting in class shaking like a leaf because I knew the teacher was about to collect our homework and I hadn’t completed mine. Sometimes it was because I forgot, but more often than not, I just chose not to do it. Typically, this was because the subject didn’t interest me and I didn’t appreciate its importance. In actuality, I guess I was just a typical adolescent.
As a flight instructor I am now on the opposite side of the fence. I am the teacher and my flight customers are my students. I am the one handing out homework, and I have to be honest, when a student doesn’t complete an assignment it is puzzling and confusing. This training is an endeavor they chose, it’s one they have obvious interest in, and they are clearly no longer a rebellious whipper-snapper. Further, the importance of the information cannot be understated and this is training they are directly paying for.
The reason for this post is an effort to assist students in understanding the importance of completing and comprehending the study materials we assign before a flight lesson.
As you probably have discovered, each lesson has a learning objective and an aviation skill to hone. Typically, we ask that you read a related chapter in a textbook or watch a relevant video, plan a cross country, or complete a navigation log prior to a flight. The efficacy of the flight exercise we are about to engage in would be significantly hobbled if you did not prepare in advance. Moreover, each flight lesson is a building block which supports each subsequent lesson to come. Without proper study, the house we are attempting to build is being forged on a very weak foundation.
When an aircraft is scheduled, it is usually for only 2 hours or so and let’s break down a typical encounter:
After the usual pleasantries and small talk 10 to 15 minutes pass. The instructor knows that there will be significant time spent walking out to the plane, performing a pre-flight, calling for fuel, adding oil, completing checklists, starting-up, warming-up, running-up, taxiing and flying to the practice area…so he or she looks at their watch, closes their eyes and inquires with trepidation…
“…ok, so, did you read the chapter I assigned which covered Sectional Charts and emergencies procedures?”
The student is caught off guard by the question and begins a sheepish apology of:
“Ah, yea…I ah…well… sort of…I mean I ah.… you know...might of missed a little…or some…you know…basically all of it.”
It is now clear the quality of the lesson is compromised. The instructor won’t reprimand the student, send them to the principal’s office or demand penance, but trust me, the sentence is close at hand!
Now, instead of just a 5 or 10 minute synopsis of the lesson plan, the instructor must give a 90 minute lecture compressed into a hasty 30 to 40 minute oration of the subject matter.
This student arrived at the airport with the excitement of flight, but unfortunately they just deprived themselves of precious air time. They are now ground-bound, forced into self-inflicted atonement for the sins of educational neglect. They are sentenced to sit in a windowless classroom and listen to a middle-aged man droning on about some topic on a beautiful Saturday morning…one with the Sun bright, the sky blue, the winds calm and an aircraft beckoning from its tie-down. For pity’s sake, I beg you to avoid putting yourself in this position!
There is so much more to becoming a pilot than stick and rudder skills. You are going to need extensive knowledge of aerodynamics, the weather, aircraft systems, cross-country planning, ATC communications, FAA regulations, aeronautical charts, the POH, and the list goes on. It is for pity’s sake that I implore you to study your assigned material before for the scheduled flight.
Escape the mindset that it is only your job to show up, sit inertly at a desk while an instructor pours knowledge into your head. This attitude is deeply flawed, because becoming a safe and knowledgeable aviator is not a passive activity…it is an active process; you and only you must take charge, take the initiative and take command of your learning.
After solo, the instructor’s role transitions from teacher, to evaluator, to passenger, to peer. Therefore, take ownership of each flight!
In closing, your instructor will always be there as your mentor, your guide and your most dedicated supporter, but understand it remains your responsibility and it benefits only you to complete required assignments, to comprehend the material, to show up prepared, and to ask relevant questions.
Gene Wentzel, ATP, CFII
Should a passing grade on the written and a 3rd class medical be prereqs for flight instruction?
So you think it's gotten worse? When did it seem to start to change?
24% completion rate is pretty grim.
24% completion rate is pretty grim.
Fast forward a few decades, the good jobs you can get with a high school diploma are largely gone.
Academic, not so much. But manufacturing activity, which was the backbone of US labor, has been in decline for some time. We are still the number one manufacturer in the world, but lots of stuff is now made elsewhere. Moreover, automation has replaced lots and lots of jobs. I suspect this is the big driver in getting folks into college.Can you back this up with a solid academic reference? I see plenty of tradesman jobs standing unfilled and signs up begging for people.
As a public school teacher I echo everything in this thread as far as lack of motivation and students expecting everything to be handed to them. To be quite honest though, it is incredibly hard to fail a grade. You pretty much have to stop breathing to not pass. Schools are more concerned about losing funding to lower graduation/passing rates then actually making sure students gain the knowledge they are supposed to.
Sorry rant off. On an aviation note though I do not understand why people waste money and do not study before a lesson. I am paying my hard earned money to be there and am dang sure going to make the best of it. I guess if money is no issue to a student I can somewhat understand it. I plan on pursuing the rest of my ratings and would love to be a CFI one day. The main reason being you would have motivated students and I would enjoy the curriculum vs what I do now. But some of the CFI stories here sound similar to some stories I have of my 7th grade students.
Academic, not so much. But manufacturing activity, which was the backbone of US labor, has been in decline for some time. We are still the number one manufacturer in the world, but lots of stuff is now made elsewhere. Moreover, automation has replaced lots and lots of jobs. I suspect this is the big driver in getting folks into college.
I agree that the trades are important, but they also require their degree of training. You can't just be an electrician with a high school diploma, for an example.
lol. seriously. If I am doing a X hour cross country with a student you're damn right that the student is going to pay me for my time from the moment we start talking about the flight at the FBO to the moment we are back at the FBO and I've completed their logbook.Been there. I had one charge me for all of their time once.
We were flying MY plane, and I was fueling it. During the fueling she went to the ladies room and spoke to her husband on the mobile phone. I didn't care... until she charged me for the whole time block and I'm like "What did I learn during that" and she said that I consumed her time and had to pay for it.
Needless to say, that never happened again, and I didn't allow her to use her mobile phone in my plane.
lol. seriously. If I am doing a X hour cross country with a student you're damn right that the student is going to pay me for my time from the moment we start talking about the flight at the FBO to the moment we are back at the FBO and I've completed their logbook.
During this cross country it is quite likely that I will walk into the bathroom and take a ****. I'll probably take a phone call too. Why? Because I have a whole additional job and it's reasonable to expect someone to be able to pause for a few minutes for personal issues after spending hours with you. If you told me that I did something wrong because I used a restroom (safety issue) and made a phone call during the few minutes you were preoccupied I assure you that you wouldn't have to worry about firing me because I wouldn't be flying with you again. Depending on the tone you took with me there is a very strong chance that you're going to have to find a new way home if we are operating my airplane. If we are operating your airplane and you are student well you're going to need to find another instructor to get your airplane home. Good luck - it's a small community and none of them would be interested after your antics. A quick phone call and I'll have another airplane picking me up in a flash.
I tell students from the beginning that I am not their employee nor am I their gym trainer or golf instructor. If they want to learn to fly they need to think of me as a partner in the process and treat me as such. I do not need to fly with the person - therefore if there is not appropriate respect I simply will not.
Let me ask you this. If you are an hourly emplyoee at a typical business. Would you expect the owner to not pay you for the couple minutes you used the restroom? How about if your wife called you with an emergency that took you 90 seconds to resolve over the phone. I suppose the employer shouldn't pay that time either.
This **** works both ways and I'd recommend you open your eyes a little more in the future. I can assure you that every student I have ever had has called me when I am at work. I'll take a few minutes to answer their question. I don't bill them for those few minutes. And I certainly don't call up my HR department and tell them to subtract 5 minutes from my paycheck.
Whatever. The good news is that 99% of the people I've interacted with out there are more reasonable than you and have never raised issue over the situation you described which is common in flight training. I've fired one student for not respecting me. His plan severely backfired - the other local instructors declined to provide instruction after asking me why I stopped. That was the end of his learning to fly.
Oh. I also use my cell phone on every single flight. It runs my music and gives me maps and weather. I also use it to take notes on the student so that I can give a good debrief afterwords. A student will definitely see me tapping on it from time to time. I've given over a thousand hours of instruction with music playing in my headset and I don't intend on changing that. I've never had a person in that time complain or raise issue.
Agreed with the whole post, and especially this part.Whatever. The good news is that 99% of the people I've interacted with out there are more reasonable than you and have never raised issue over the situation you described which is common in flight training.
Every situation is different. In my case I am paid a fair deal of money to be available 24x7x365. My students are fully aware of this and know I could be interrupted. Without that money I would not be instructing in the first place. Two days ago I was in a meeting with our CEO and took a phone call from a student. I did not attempt to cover up what the call was - nor was it an issue.Even being full union, if I took a call infront of a upper manager that was for side work, or just started chit chatting with some friend, it wouldn't be good.
lol. forgot about that.@jesse you mean I can’t get that five minutes back over Kansas somewhere late at night? LOL.
Hell, I was just glad it was your work calling and not mine! LOL.
Every situation is different. In my case I am paid a fair deal of money to be available 24x7x365. My students are fully aware of this and know I could be interrupted. Without that money I would not be instructing in the first place. Two days ago I was in a meeting with our CEO and took a phone call from a student. I did not attempt to cover up what the call was - nor was it an issue.
Hell my CEO has offered to hire me a personal assistant, paid by my employer, to help me run the flight school, simply because he knows I'm overloaded and knows assisting with that will give him more value. I did not take him up on that offer..but it's just an example of how we all have different rules of engagement with this stuff. Being understanding goes a long ways. People are willing to put up with some inconveniences if you provide the value they need. Even better if it's incredibly difficult to find someone with your skillset.
In addition - most of the students I've delt with have similar situations. They must always be available too - either because they run their own businesses or because they have a unique career. It's not uncommon for a student of mine to have to pause and bust out a 5 or 10 minute phone call. I don't take it personally - that's just life - and that phone call is what enables him to pay for the flight training.
lol. forgot about that.
lol. seriously. If I am doing a X hour cross country with a student you're damn right that the student is going to pay me for my time from the moment we start talking about the flight at the FBO to the moment we are back at the FBO and I've completed their logbook.
During this cross country it is quite likely that I will walk into the bathroom and take a ****. I'll probably take a phone call too. Why? Because I have a whole additional job and it's reasonable to expect someone to be able to pause for a few minutes for personal issues after spending hours with you. If you told me that I did something wrong because I used a restroom (safety issue) and made a phone call during the few minutes you were preoccupied I assure you that you wouldn't have to worry about firing me because I wouldn't be flying with you again. Depending on the tone you took with me there is a very strong chance that you're going to have to find a new way home if we are operating my airplane. If we are operating your airplane and you are student well you're going to need to find another instructor to get your airplane home. Good luck - it's a small community and none of them would be interested after your antics. A quick phone call and I'll have another airplane picking me up in a flash. I don't fly with *******s.
I tell students from the beginning that I am not their employee nor am I their gym trainer or golf instructor. If they want to learn to fly they need to think of me as a partner in the process and treat me as such. I do not need to fly with the person - therefore if there is not appropriate mutual respect I simply will not.
Let me ask you this. If you are an hourly emplyoee at a typical business. Would you expect the owner to not pay you for the couple minutes you used the restroom? How about if your wife called you with an emergency that took you 90 seconds to resolve over the phone. I suppose the employer shouldn't pay that time either.
This **** works both ways and I'd recommend you open your eyes a little more in the future. I can assure you that every student I have ever had has called me when I am at work. I'll take a few minutes to answer their question. I don't bill them for those few minutes. And I certainly don't call up my HR department and tell them to subtract 5 minutes from my paycheck.
Whatever. The good news is that 99% of the people I've interacted with out there are more reasonable than you and have never raised issue over the situation you described which is common in flight training. I've fired one student for not respecting me. His plan severely backfired - the other local instructors declined to provide instruction after asking me why I stopped. That was the end of his learning to fly.
Oh. I also use my cell phone on every single flight. It runs my music and gives me maps and weather. I also use it to take notes on the student so that I can give a good debrief afterwords. A student will definitely see me tapping on it from time to time. I've given over a thousand hours of instruction with music playing in my headset and I don't intend on changing that. I've never had a person in that time complain or raise issue.
The other issue is trades pay a lot less now than they did 20 or 30 years ago. For instance my dad was a heavy-duty welder mechanic, he passed away in the early 1980s. Talking to family members that are doing the same job today and in the same union he was in they only make a few dollars more an hour more than he did in late 70s and early 80s then you account for inflation and they're making a lot less in real world money.Sounds pretty squishy to base the opinion on. Automation also creates different jobs and manufacturing losses weren’t the majority of all “blue collar” work.
The “big driver” may very well be more related to the ease of receiving loans in dollar amounts that mathematically turn the students into slaves for at least ten years. Even consumer credit tends to not be offered beyond about a 3-4 year payback number. The education loan market essentially has no cap on what can be loaned.
See: ERAU and loans exceeding $150,000 for a job that pays $30,000 at entry-level. Just as a partially joking but also deadly serious warning inside Aviation.
The other issue is trades pay a lot less now than they did 20 or 30 years ago. For instance my dad was a heavy-duty welder mechanic, he passed away in the early 1980s. Talking to family members that are doing the same job today and in the same union he was in they only make a few dollars more an hour more than he did in late 70s and early 80s then you account for inflation and they're making a lot less in real world money.
Just ask a skilled carpenter that builds houses for a living how much he gets paid, you'll quickly wonder how they can afford to have a place to live let alone eat. 30 years ago these jobs could easily support a family and afford hobbies such as boating, off road toys, etc, and that was as a single income family.
Got that right. My dad was CAB then FAA and supported a stay at home wife and four kids.The other issue is trades pay a lot less now than they did 20 or 30 years ago. For instance my dad was a heavy-duty welder mechanic, he passed away in the early 1980s. Talking to family members that are doing the same job today and in the same union he was in they only make a few dollars more an hour more than he did in late 70s and early 80s then you account for inflation and they're making a lot less in real world money.
Just ask a skilled carpenter that builds houses for a living how much he gets paid, you'll quickly wonder how they can afford to have a place to live let alone eat. 30 years ago these jobs could easily support a family and afford hobbies such as boating, off road toys, etc, and that was as a single income family.
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