the problem is, what ever the airlines do filters down to GA because A. the FAA only thinks 121/135 and B. most of the good old CFI's are either dead or retired and the new breed are all building time for the airlines. every CFI teaches stabilized approach, but they don't understand what stabilized approach really is. do you really need to be configured, on speed, power up at 1000 ft in a c150? there is really no reason to carry power all the way down final in a single engine trainer, all that will do is make you land short if it fails. the stabilized power up is needed in a airliner due to spool up time and inertia. power off 180's should not be a commercial maneuver, it should be a primary maneuver. its simple energy management. the technique of flying a wide pattern with a student to give them time is a bad technique, because it builds a bad habit that you must undo as they progress. the reliance on vasi's has also been a factor in wide patterns, a three degree glideslope is great when on gauges, but makes for a big pattern because of the math to intercept it off a base. i prefer to use an airport without a vasi for primary training if I can, it makes the student really visualize and understand what they are doing. it all comes down to the narrowing of the box that pilots perform in. the faa has been pushing pilots away from the corners of the envelope for years, thinking that if people dont fly out towards the performance envelope they will not exceed it and safety will improve. look at the "new" slow flight standards. all it does is make pilots more dangerous when they get out of that small comfort zone.
there was an earlier post about limiting bank angle to decrease the chance of a stall/spin. how does that increase safety? first, if your not uncoordinated there wont be a spin. second, stall speed only increases with a increase in bank angle with a increase load factor, so if increase the bank angle but keep the load factor constant no increase in stall speed.
As CFI's we are all failing, we are teaching people how to fly, not how to be pilots. most CFI's are a expert at programming the 430, but have never even cracked open aerodynamics for naval aviatiors.