saratoga2250
Filing Flight Plan
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- Jan 22, 2016
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saratoga2250
Here's a story for instructors to evaluate:
A student has been in training with the same instructor for a period of two years. He has taken several breaks in training due to various reasons, but has eventually come around to being able to perform solo cross countries. Up to this point, he has been an excellent student. His arrival to the airport is timely, he seems to have studied ground material in preparation for each lesson, he has passed his written test with a good score, and he is eager to obtain his private pilot certificate. The instructor and student have a great relationship.
Prior to entering the final stage in training, where we "smooth out the edges" in preparation for the checkride, the student starts becoming defiant with his instructor. It first begins with tardiness but soon thereafter extends to behavior exhibited during pre-lesson briefings, such as simply refusing to sit down when his instructor invitingly says, "Come on in and have a seat." The instructor shrugs this off a few times, but soon realizes the student's body language indicates he is eager to leave the briefing. He points his feet at the door, checks his watch, and is easily distracted by the smallest movements outside the window or outside the door.
His performance during training flights is unsatisfactory. Numerous PTS items are out of tolerance. Checklists are not being run, resulting in critical items being missed. His primary instructor enlists the help of another instructor to evaluate the student's progress independently. The assisting instructor notes the same deficiencies as the primary instructor. Despite going through a long brief with the assisting instructor, the student returns a day later to fly with the primary instructor, repeating the same mistakes with no improvement whatsoever.
The student takes no notes during any briefings with either instructor. He refutes many of the debrief items, attempting to create doubt in the instructor's mind as to what the instructor knows was observed. The brief ends with the student asking "So you think I'll need maybe 1 more flight before I'm ready to go?" The answer is always "You'll be signed off as soon as you consistently demonstrate conformity with PTS standards."
The student's ego is bursting at the seams. He wholeheartedly believes he is ready to go, but his primary instructor and the assisting instructor both know that is not true. Both instructors are honest, experienced instructors with solid track records of student success.
The primary instructor is now considering:
1. Sending the student to an FAA DPE or inspector for a checkride, despite knowing he will not pass, under the belief that a first-time checkride failure would deflate the student's ego and make him realize his instructors are correct.
2. Sending him to a third instructor, who would then become the student's primary until he is performing within PTS standards.
3. Terminating his training completely.
What would you do?
A student has been in training with the same instructor for a period of two years. He has taken several breaks in training due to various reasons, but has eventually come around to being able to perform solo cross countries. Up to this point, he has been an excellent student. His arrival to the airport is timely, he seems to have studied ground material in preparation for each lesson, he has passed his written test with a good score, and he is eager to obtain his private pilot certificate. The instructor and student have a great relationship.
Prior to entering the final stage in training, where we "smooth out the edges" in preparation for the checkride, the student starts becoming defiant with his instructor. It first begins with tardiness but soon thereafter extends to behavior exhibited during pre-lesson briefings, such as simply refusing to sit down when his instructor invitingly says, "Come on in and have a seat." The instructor shrugs this off a few times, but soon realizes the student's body language indicates he is eager to leave the briefing. He points his feet at the door, checks his watch, and is easily distracted by the smallest movements outside the window or outside the door.
His performance during training flights is unsatisfactory. Numerous PTS items are out of tolerance. Checklists are not being run, resulting in critical items being missed. His primary instructor enlists the help of another instructor to evaluate the student's progress independently. The assisting instructor notes the same deficiencies as the primary instructor. Despite going through a long brief with the assisting instructor, the student returns a day later to fly with the primary instructor, repeating the same mistakes with no improvement whatsoever.
The student takes no notes during any briefings with either instructor. He refutes many of the debrief items, attempting to create doubt in the instructor's mind as to what the instructor knows was observed. The brief ends with the student asking "So you think I'll need maybe 1 more flight before I'm ready to go?" The answer is always "You'll be signed off as soon as you consistently demonstrate conformity with PTS standards."
The student's ego is bursting at the seams. He wholeheartedly believes he is ready to go, but his primary instructor and the assisting instructor both know that is not true. Both instructors are honest, experienced instructors with solid track records of student success.
The primary instructor is now considering:
1. Sending the student to an FAA DPE or inspector for a checkride, despite knowing he will not pass, under the belief that a first-time checkride failure would deflate the student's ego and make him realize his instructors are correct.
2. Sending him to a third instructor, who would then become the student's primary until he is performing within PTS standards.
3. Terminating his training completely.
What would you do?