ARFlyer
En-Route
Flows will help him when the workload starts getting high enough that muscle memory needs to kick in. Mainly teach him how to prioritize tasks. You necessarily don't have to do A-B-C in that order. As an example:
When I'm working as the Pilot Not Flying, my workload is very high just after takeoff. I have to deal with ATC, callouts, after takeoff flow, and sometimes weather. I put ATC on the backburner if a callout or an aircraft config change is imminent. Once I contact ATC, they might give me an altitude and heading in quick order. I'll often spin the altitude selector enough to keep the climb going and spin the heading to the general direction. This is to give the Pilot Flying enough to go on while I get enough breathing room to finish any nav programming. Once that happens I'll set the altitude and heading to the actual values and get them confirmed set. Once all that is done I normally finish the after takeoff flow and checklist.
Realize everything above took place in a minute or so. I can't do two things at once or stuff starts going sideways very quick. It seems like I'm multitasking, but I'm only rapidly prioritizing tasks as the environment changes. He will need to learn what is important to do NOW vs. 30 seconds from now.
When I'm working as the Pilot Not Flying, my workload is very high just after takeoff. I have to deal with ATC, callouts, after takeoff flow, and sometimes weather. I put ATC on the backburner if a callout or an aircraft config change is imminent. Once I contact ATC, they might give me an altitude and heading in quick order. I'll often spin the altitude selector enough to keep the climb going and spin the heading to the general direction. This is to give the Pilot Flying enough to go on while I get enough breathing room to finish any nav programming. Once that happens I'll set the altitude and heading to the actual values and get them confirmed set. Once all that is done I normally finish the after takeoff flow and checklist.
Realize everything above took place in a minute or so. I can't do two things at once or stuff starts going sideways very quick. It seems like I'm multitasking, but I'm only rapidly prioritizing tasks as the environment changes. He will need to learn what is important to do NOW vs. 30 seconds from now.