Fearless Tower
Touchdown! Greaser!
While this is not an aviation-specific related question, it has some definite application to flight training and I figured I'd ask the POA CFI brain trust for any insight on how to deal with students who lock up.
About 18 months ago, I left full time professional flying to take a job teaching ship handling for the Navy. I've been pretty successful so far getting students from a wide variety of backgrounds from very basic understanding to a functional level of proficiency and decision making in a short period of time……except for one particular type of student - the type that literally will stare death in the face and take no action.
I'm at a loss (and so are my fellow instructors) at how to get these students over the hurdle. I have a hard time even relating to what it going on in their heads. I am the kind of pilot who would still be trying to work the controls if a wing came off the plane in flight.
But these students will literally stare at an oncoming ship, knowing that they are going to collide and be so paralyzed by indecision that they take no action to avoid the collision or if they do it is way too late and so small of an action to be worthless.
It would be like a student faced with an engine out on takeoff and doing nothing….just holding onto the yoke and stalling/spinning it in.
How do you CFIs deal with those students?
About 18 months ago, I left full time professional flying to take a job teaching ship handling for the Navy. I've been pretty successful so far getting students from a wide variety of backgrounds from very basic understanding to a functional level of proficiency and decision making in a short period of time……except for one particular type of student - the type that literally will stare death in the face and take no action.
I'm at a loss (and so are my fellow instructors) at how to get these students over the hurdle. I have a hard time even relating to what it going on in their heads. I am the kind of pilot who would still be trying to work the controls if a wing came off the plane in flight.
But these students will literally stare at an oncoming ship, knowing that they are going to collide and be so paralyzed by indecision that they take no action to avoid the collision or if they do it is way too late and so small of an action to be worthless.
It would be like a student faced with an engine out on takeoff and doing nothing….just holding onto the yoke and stalling/spinning it in.
How do you CFIs deal with those students?