I was just reading the recent thread about the youtuber crash, and the discussion about 'worthless' CFI's...SLB's someone called them (self loading baggage)
I've seen it written and heard it said many times over the years, that a student should interview CFI's and pick one that they mesh with. That's something I've pondered a lot but have never really figured out practically speaking how to make that happen....so I'm wondering if any of you have pointers about it. A little bit for me but mostly as an open question to new students.....
So most flight schools I've been to for training, or just for rental checkouts, have many instructors listed on the roster. The school I started a rusty pilot checkout a few months back currently has nine. Now these instructors aren't running regular office hours and it's not like you can go hang out in the school for a couple hours and meet them all. And doing that even half a day on a saturday, might let you see a bunch but not really talk with them as the bounce between students on a busy schedule.
On my recent flight I wasn't overly impressed with the CFI that the scheduler put me with. I had called to schedule a flight, and after a short conversation the scheduler just put me with an instructor. That's the way it has always worked for me, even back when I did my primary training. Take what I got form the scheduler...based generally on availability the day and time that worked best for me for the first flight.
In the case of my recent flight, it was in a Cessna Skycatcher, so the list of available instructors were limited because some of them are bigger guys and either can't or don't want to fly the little thing. That makes the narrowing process a little easier but still, no practical way I see to go interview them all. So this CFI just didn't give me a warm fuzzy. Very much short circuited a preflight, showed a lack of mastery with some of the systems, and blew off stuff that made the plane technically not airworthy (that I didn't spot till during the flight, or I wouldn't have gone). Maybe even more importantly I didn't "gut-feel" that he was all that great at instructing, but I'll cut slack on that since this was our first flight together and he had to evaluate where i was before he could really focus on what to teach.
So anyway, I cancelled my follw-up flights bucked for the following weekend becasue of some family obligations, and i figured it might also give them some time to fix the airplane. One of these days soon I want to get back up, but honestly want to go to a different school.
I do have a little credit left on a block account there, and was thinking about gifting it to my 18 yo son for a couple of introductory lessons....BUT I really want to be smart about putting him with the best instructor possible!
I suppose the most obvious method would be to take what you get...and if you don't like it, schedule with another one for the next flight....and just keep working the list till you fly wit them all.... but that's not very efficient...and depending on the roster could get you 10 hours or more in before figuring it out!
So, any pointers?
I've seen it written and heard it said many times over the years, that a student should interview CFI's and pick one that they mesh with. That's something I've pondered a lot but have never really figured out practically speaking how to make that happen....so I'm wondering if any of you have pointers about it. A little bit for me but mostly as an open question to new students.....
So most flight schools I've been to for training, or just for rental checkouts, have many instructors listed on the roster. The school I started a rusty pilot checkout a few months back currently has nine. Now these instructors aren't running regular office hours and it's not like you can go hang out in the school for a couple hours and meet them all. And doing that even half a day on a saturday, might let you see a bunch but not really talk with them as the bounce between students on a busy schedule.
On my recent flight I wasn't overly impressed with the CFI that the scheduler put me with. I had called to schedule a flight, and after a short conversation the scheduler just put me with an instructor. That's the way it has always worked for me, even back when I did my primary training. Take what I got form the scheduler...based generally on availability the day and time that worked best for me for the first flight.
In the case of my recent flight, it was in a Cessna Skycatcher, so the list of available instructors were limited because some of them are bigger guys and either can't or don't want to fly the little thing. That makes the narrowing process a little easier but still, no practical way I see to go interview them all. So this CFI just didn't give me a warm fuzzy. Very much short circuited a preflight, showed a lack of mastery with some of the systems, and blew off stuff that made the plane technically not airworthy (that I didn't spot till during the flight, or I wouldn't have gone). Maybe even more importantly I didn't "gut-feel" that he was all that great at instructing, but I'll cut slack on that since this was our first flight together and he had to evaluate where i was before he could really focus on what to teach.
So anyway, I cancelled my follw-up flights bucked for the following weekend becasue of some family obligations, and i figured it might also give them some time to fix the airplane. One of these days soon I want to get back up, but honestly want to go to a different school.
I do have a little credit left on a block account there, and was thinking about gifting it to my 18 yo son for a couple of introductory lessons....BUT I really want to be smart about putting him with the best instructor possible!
I suppose the most obvious method would be to take what you get...and if you don't like it, schedule with another one for the next flight....and just keep working the list till you fly wit them all.... but that's not very efficient...and depending on the roster could get you 10 hours or more in before figuring it out!
So, any pointers?