Greetings everyone. I'm doing some soul searching here.
After my initial experience with the Aviation Instructor's Handbook, now I'm not so sure I'm cut out for teaching, especially the FAA way. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying the material isn't important. But, how does someone know if he is really suited to be a CFI?
Do you enjoy both teaching and flying? Are you willing to work to become a good teacher if you aren't one already?But, how does someone know if he is really suited to be a CFI?
On to the FIA exam now. Thanks for the encouragement everyone.
Well now I feel dumb. I got an 80 on the FOI. I'll probably take the FIA sometime next week.**UPDATE**
Even after complaining about the Aviation Instructor's Handbook in my OP, I managed to get through it and learn a little bit. I then promptly bought the Sheppard Air FOI test prep software. I took the test today and scored a 100%.
Lessons learned:
1) Don't be so quick to grouse about boring material
2) I know the meaning of rote learning
3) Sheppard Air delivers as advertised.
On to the FIA exam now. Thanks for the encouragement everyone.
Do it. There is no better way to stay current on and learn a ton about any given subject than teaching it. My several hundred hours of instruction given are easily some of the most valuable hours in my logbook in terms of making me a more knowledgable/precise pilot.
**UPDATE**
I passed the FIA exam with a very good score. It seems as if the more I study, the less I seem to know.
I had an opportunity to discuss CFI training at the flight school I'm considering. Let me state right from the beginning that the flight school is well established, thriving, and staffed with full time professional flight instructors. They also have a fairly large fleet of airplanes, so coming up with an airworthy complex airplane for a checkride will not be an issue. The school did not attempt to make a hard sales pitch. The person I spoke with expressed with confidence that upon completion of their course I would be fully prepared to be a competent CFI in most entry level aircraft.
I was given a copy of the (very detailed) CFI syllabus and immediately noted that course would involve many more hours than advertised on the school's website. A back of the envelope calculation shows that the total cost (including the spin training/endorsement) would be just shy of $10k. Rental for the checkride and fee to DPE since I think FSDO farms out initial rides now is not included and could add another $1k or so. There is no point in outlining my sunk costs, they are what they are. It is clear to me that I'm likely to never recoup my investment as a part time CFI, especially since I plan to be well insured. I do believe that I will be thoroughly prepared if I complete the school's course.
Factoring in travel, hotels, meals, weather delays etc. pretty much rules out any cost advantage of going to a school located out of state. I'm guessing the cost would be a wash or perhaps even more expensive and likely to end up with lower quality training.
So it seems like for me it is a question of whether or not at the end of the journey, the time commitment and financial investment is worth it. I'm not sure how to evaluate that, so any comments from the experienced CFIs would be appreciated. FWIW, spending the money on training will not cause a financial strain, but like all pilots I like to get the best value for my dollar.
So, is $10k reasonable for CFI training?
**UPDATE**
I passed the FIA exam with a very good score. It seems as if the more I study, the less I seem to know.
I had an opportunity to discuss CFI training at the flight school I'm considering. Let me state right from the beginning that the flight school is well established, thriving, and staffed with full time professional flight instructors. They also have a fairly large fleet of airplanes, so coming up with an airworthy complex airplane for a checkride will not be an issue. The school did not attempt to make a hard sales pitch. The person I spoke with expressed with confidence that upon completion of their course I would be fully prepared to be a competent CFI in most entry level aircraft.
I was given a copy of the (very detailed) CFI syllabus and immediately noted that course would involve many more hours than advertised on the school's website. A back of the envelope calculation shows that the total cost (including the spin training/endorsement) would be just shy of $10k. Rental for the checkride and fee to DPE since I think FSDO farms out initial rides now is not included and could add another $1k or so. There is no point in outlining my sunk costs, they are what they are. It is clear to me that I'm likely to never recoup my investment as a part time CFI, especially since I plan to be well insured. I do believe that I will be thoroughly prepared if I complete the school's course.
Factoring in travel, hotels, meals, weather delays etc. pretty much rules out any cost advantage of going to a school located out of state. I'm guessing the cost would be a wash or perhaps even more expensive and likely to end up with lower quality training.
So it seems like for me it is a question of whether or not at the end of the journey, the time commitment and financial investment is worth it. I'm not sure how to evaluate that, so any comments from the experienced CFIs would be appreciated. FWIW, spending the money on training will not cause a financial strain, but like all pilots I like to get the best value for my dollar.
So, is $10k reasonable for CFI training?
An enthusiastic amen!I'm one of a number of CFIs I know who do less teaching these days and part of the reason is liability. At my age, I've finally accumulated a very modest estate but am way too old to build up my nest age again if I ever lost it. I teach, but pick my students pretty carefully and do almost no primary any more.
Like many, I got my CFI as a way to fly more affordably. I didn't do it so much to build hours, thought that ended up being useful as I went on to fly charter for a time. When I started, I probably had 400-500 hours. I then flew 400 hours or more a year for a while as CFI.
In my case, I was not a trained teacher, but had done a lot of instructing during my military career. Like you, I found the FOI dull and boring and poorly written. Looking back, the FOI has many excellent points and I had to "relearn" or learn to appreciate the value.
With many young CFIs I'm familiar with, it's a "see one, do one, teach one" thing. The CFI teaches what he was taught. Often, it's a very narrow and not well developed lesson where the student learns to fly by rote. The CFIs and students may fly a given range of procedures very well but don't really understand the big picture or why things happen. You can get a CFI-I who doesn't have 50 hours of actual and none of that in really busy airspace. That gets them by for the most part but doesn't do anything for handling the unusual situations.
As a green "see one, do one, teach one" CFI, one doesn't know what one doesn't know. After flying charter for even a year, one becomes much more aware of how narrow a green CFI's perspective can be. Granted, the charter or experienced business pilot may also develop a narrow view of flying, but it's more based in reality. That CFI probably needs to bone up on the regs and book work part.
The income part is challenging. You can't really count on a steady income. Your time is subject to short term demands. Students cancel or even "no show".
My retrospective on all of this is that to be a better CFI, one needs experience in real world flying. It is very difficult, but if one can, wrangle right seat flights in local charter or business operations. Next, take another look at the FOI and try to pull out the important parts and consciously use them in instruction. Also, put yourself in a position to be comfortable with any liability. Sadly, I think the more one is qualified to be a good CFI the less incentive there is.
My CFI INital was about 20 hours of flying, and 40 hours of ground with a CFI.. And a stupid amount of self study. Part 61 of course...
No where close to 10k. Granted I had recently done by commercial in the same plane, so it wasn't much effort learning the systems or flying the plane..
I would guess I had maybe 4k in my CFI and CFII all in, DPE's, books and everything. No multi in that.
Thanks for your thoughtful reply. I didn't see your post until today. Liability exposure IS something I worry about.
That's why God made insurance.[/QUOTE
Good point. What would adequate insurance cost for a CFI, can anyone give us some current numbers?