farmerbrake
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2014
- Messages
- 578
- Display Name
Display name:
farmerbrake
Excluding the guy with hundreds of thousands of millions of hours, what makes an instructor good?
My answer was that I enjoyed teaching. I never got enough students to get enough hours to move up, something happened with my "boss" and I gave up on it.When asked: "Why did you become an instructor?" Their answer is NOT: "Because I don't want to die alone!"
Experience outside of the training environment? An instructor whose whole career consists of primary training at local airports cannot pass on how things work in the real world. S/he will train you to pass the checkride, though.Excluding the guy with hundreds of thousands of millions of hours, what makes an instructor good?
Yeah... I had two instructors first who that was their goal as they built time to go work at an airline or a "real" flying jobThey're not merely building time and resentful of the time spent teaching
Thanks for the input!There's a difference between building time and building time and not caring about students. I did the former. I had no intention of being a career CFI. Before I left I gave my students ample notice and had them fly and "interview" different CFIs at the school to see which one would work best for them. I made sure I explained in detail to their new instructor exactly where they were in their training, what their strengths/weaknesses were, and their personality. Not all the time builders are bad! In my year of instructing I only signed off 7 people and they all passed on their first try. If no one gave me a chance at 280TT I'd still be instructing
Exactly. As long as you are up front with them, they'll appreciate it. The ones that leave their students without notice give us a bad name.Thanks for the input!
I'm in the same boat as well. Building time working towards the airlines, but priority will be being there for my students.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N910A using Tapatalk
- They keep their hands off the controls and always want and expect the student to fly the plane (sans emergency)
The ones that leave their students without notice give us a bad name.
Yea that's a special circumstance. I'm talking about the guys that get another job and dump the student almost immediately. Your situation was out of your control.Well, you never know. I gave a former flight school that employed me a couple weeks notice and they deleted me from the system the next business day without notice. Ironically, exactly that kind of incompetence is one of the reasons I left.