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CFI question



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 11th 08, 07:53 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Tman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 68
Default CFI question

When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism.
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training.

Here's my question. Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?

T


  #2  
Old September 11th 08, 09:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Gig 601Xl Builder
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 683
Default CFI question

Tman wrote:
When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism.
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training.

Here's my question. Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?

T



Not by any definition of the word I've ever seen.
  #3  
Old September 11th 08, 09:27 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Ol Shy & Bashful
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 222
Default CFI question

On Sep 11, 1:53*pm, Tman x@x wrote:
When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism.
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training.

Here's my question. *Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?

T



Ahhh...does that make ANY teacher a syncophant for following
acknowledged techniques?
I think that is kind of a dumb question.
Ol S&B a teacher for over 50 years and a CFI with more than 6000
hours of dual given.
  #4  
Old September 11th 08, 09:43 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Ol Shy & Bashful
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 222
Default CFI question

On Sep 11, 1:53*pm, Tman x@x wrote:
When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism.
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training.

Here's my question. *Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?

T



T
Did I miss part of it
Ol S&B
  #5  
Old September 12th 08, 01:47 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Ol Shy & Bashful
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 222
Default CFI question

On Sep 11, 3:43*pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote:
On Sep 11, 1:53*pm, Tman x@x wrote:

When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism.
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training.


Here's my question. *Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?


T




T
Did I miss part of it
Ol S&B


Tman
To add to my comments and offer up some observations....... I am
currently senior instructor for a military training/screening program.
I take my responsibility very seriously knowing these young pilots
will potentially be faced with hostile response when they go
operational. Having been shot at and hit tends to color your
perspective.
I have a reputation for being hard and fair. A not uncommon statement
I hear from students is, "He will bust your balls for everything and
you'll learn more from him in an hour than you have learned in the
entire program."
Right up front I tell students I get pretty intensive in the cockpit
up to and including profanity. Does it work for me? If you check with
all the students I've flown with they will tell you YES. Certainly I
don't go overboard with any profanity (depending on who you talk to)
but the intensity doesn't ease up.
Now if you read all the FAA propaganda, I can't possibly be an
effective instructor as I frequently violate all the rules and
guidelines.for fundamentals of instruction. I went thru all that BS
when I was in USMC Drill Instructor school back in the mid 50's.
It often takes a student several hours before I finally tell them they
are doing good. And when I do, they are smiling for days. I'm sure
anyone here can recall favorite teachers and describe why they are
favorites. The challenge is to recall all the mediocre ones? With my 8
younger CFI's, I am watching their techniques carefully and reading
the critiques with an eye to maintaining our standards at a high
level.
I don't see any of them as syncophants.gg
Best Regards
Ol S&B
  #6  
Old September 12th 08, 02:55 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Tman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 68
Default CFI question

Hey. I'd pay for a couple hours of that. (really).
I've had a variety of CFI's and I find that flying with a 'hardass' may
not make your day but you sure learn a lot.
Are you around the New England area and have time for the occasional
student...
T


Ol Shy & Bashful wrote:
On Sep 11, 3:43 pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote:
On Sep 11, 1:53 pm, Tman x@x wrote:

When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism.
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training.
Here's my question. Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?
T

T
Did I miss part of it
Ol S&B


Tman
To add to my comments and offer up some observations....... I am
currently senior instructor for a military training/screening program.
I take my responsibility very seriously knowing these young pilots
will potentially be faced with hostile response when they go
operational. Having been shot at and hit tends to color your
perspective.
I have a reputation for being hard and fair. A not uncommon statement
I hear from students is, "He will bust your balls for everything and
you'll learn more from him in an hour than you have learned in the
entire program."
Right up front I tell students I get pretty intensive in the cockpit
up to and including profanity. Does it work for me? If you check with
all the students I've flown with they will tell you YES. Certainly I
don't go overboard with any profanity (depending on who you talk to)
but the intensity doesn't ease up.
Now if you read all the FAA propaganda, I can't possibly be an
effective instructor as I frequently violate all the rules and
guidelines.for fundamentals of instruction. I went thru all that BS
when I was in USMC Drill Instructor school back in the mid 50's.
It often takes a student several hours before I finally tell them they
are doing good. And when I do, they are smiling for days. I'm sure
anyone here can recall favorite teachers and describe why they are
favorites. The challenge is to recall all the mediocre ones? With my 8
younger CFI's, I am watching their techniques carefully and reading
the critiques with an eye to maintaining our standards at a high
level.
I don't see any of them as syncophants.gg
Best Regards
Ol S&B

  #7  
Old September 12th 08, 04:53 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Ol Shy & Bashful
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 222
Default CFI question

On Sep 12, 8:55*am, Tman x@x wrote:
Hey. *I'd pay for a couple hours of that. *(really).
I've had a variety of CFI's and I find that flying with a 'hardass' may
not make your day but you sure learn a lot.
Are you around the New England area and have time for the occasional
student...
T

Ol Shy & Bashful wrote:



On Sep 11, 3:43 pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote:
On Sep 11, 1:53 pm, Tman x@x wrote:


When taking lessons with a CFI, I've often had them compliment various
aspects of my performance, while also offering constructive criticism..
It seems that this behavior is right out of the pages of CFI training..
Here's my question. *Does that make the CFI a sycophant, by the formal
definition of it?
T

T
Did I miss part of it
Ol S&B


Tman
To add to my comments and offer up some observations....... I am
currently senior instructor for a military training/screening program.
I take my responsibility very seriously knowing these young pilots
will potentially be faced with hostile response when they go
operational. Having been shot at and hit tends to color your
perspective.
I have a reputation for being hard and fair. A not uncommon statement
I hear from students is, "He will bust your balls for everything and
you'll learn more from him in an hour than you have learned in the
entire program."
Right up front I tell students I get pretty intensive in the cockpit
up to and including profanity. Does it work for me? If you check with
all the students I've flown with they will tell you YES. Certainly I
don't go overboard with any profanity (depending on who you talk to)
but the intensity doesn't ease up.
Now if you read all the FAA propaganda, I can't possibly be an
effective instructor as I frequently violate all the rules and
guidelines.for fundamentals of instruction. I went thru all that BS
when I was in USMC Drill Instructor school back in the mid 50's.
It often takes a student several hours before I finally tell them they
are doing good. And when I do, they are smiling for days. I'm sure
anyone here can recall favorite teachers and describe why they are
favorites. The challenge is to recall all the mediocre ones? With my 8
younger CFI's, I am watching their techniques carefully and reading
the critiques with an eye to maintaining our standards at a high
level.
I don't see any of them as syncophants.gg
Best Regards
*Ol S&B- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Tman
No, I'm down on the gulf coast near Pensacola, FL. The home of Naval
Aviation. Check our website;Skywarriorinc.com and you can even find a
picture of me! (whoopee) I'm the one looking so serious and ready to
launch......gg
  #8  
Old September 12th 08, 10:23 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Morgans[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,924
Default CFI question


"Tman" x@x wrote

I've had a variety of CFI's and I find that flying with a 'hardass' may
not make your day but you sure learn a lot.


But have no doubt that you can learn _just_ as much from a highly competent,
demanding instructor, with a much more gentle teaching style, too.

Like Dan said, teaching is finding out how your student learns best, and by
using a variety of techniques, you will be able to find out how your student
learns best.

I'm not surprised that a prospective military candidate does well with a
firm, demanding hand, with a bit of colorful language thrown in. The same
technique applied to a 40 year old housewife would probably not be quite
appropriate. g

Of course, an instructor can not be something he is not, and teach in a way
that he can not relate to. It would still be a surprise to me, that any
instructor could be effective and use the same exact teaching style with
_every_ student.

It has always seemed to me that the very best teachers have a gift to be
able to teach almost without thinking about what will work best for each
student. That gift combined with good command of the subject being taught
results in an effective teacher, able to maximize the learning taking place,
no matter the student, as long as the student is receptive.
--
Jim in NC


  #9  
Old September 12th 08, 07:23 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Robert Moore
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 134
Default CFI question

"Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote
Right up front I tell students I get pretty intensive in the cockpit
up to and including profanity. Does it work for me? If you check with
all the students I've flown with they will tell you YES. Certainly I
don't go overboard with any profanity (depending on who you talk to)
but the intensity doesn't ease up.


Sorry Rocky.....I don't buy into that method. My training programs are
intensive...not me. I'm there to help the student beat the program.
Profanity is out of the question. Not one of my Naval Aviator instructors
at Pensacola ever resorted to the use of profanity, the old "Officer and
Gentleman" routine that an ex-Drill Sargent might not understand.

After 9 years as a Naval Aviator with combat time in Vietnam, I then spent
25 year as a B-707/B-727 airline pilot with probably 10 years spent as an
FAA designated Instructor Pilot, Manager of Flightcrew Training, Chief Pilot,
and a stint as Director of Operations.

I have been a civilian flight instructor for 38 years with a 100% pass rate
with not one Private Pilot student requiring more than 50 hours of training
to acquire an airman certificate.

You really don't have to curse and swear, you know, your looks are mean
enough.

Bob Moore
PanAm (retired)

  #10  
Old September 12th 08, 07:59 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Ol Shy & Bashful
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 222
Default CFI question

On Sep 12, 1:23*pm, Robert Moore wrote:
"Ol Shy & Bashful" *wrote

Right up front I tell students I get pretty intensive in the cockpit
up to and including profanity. Does it work for me? If you check with
all the students I've flown with they will tell you YES. Certainly I
don't go overboard with any profanity (depending on who you talk to)
but the intensity doesn't ease up.


Sorry Rocky.....I don't buy into that method. My training programs are
intensive...not me. *I'm there to help the student beat the program.
Profanity is out of the question. Not one of my Naval Aviator instructors
at Pensacola ever resorted to the use of profanity, the old "Officer and
Gentleman" routine that an ex-Drill Sargent might not understand.

After 9 years as a Naval Aviator with combat time in Vietnam, I then spent
25 year as a B-707/B-727 airline pilot with probably 10 years spent as an
FAA designated Instructor Pilot, Manager of Flightcrew Training, Chief Pilot,
and a stint as Director of Operations.

I have been a civilian flight instructor for 38 years with a 100% pass rate
with not one Private Pilot student requiring more than 50 hours of training
to acquire an airman certificate.

You really don't have to curse and swear, you know, your looks are mean
enough. * * *

Bob Moore
PanAm (retired)


Hey Bob
You know, I have really enjoyed your posts over the years and you are
a delight and a real pro. It all boils down to individual techniques.
I know guys who never raise their voice and are really scary. I know
guys who are really tough and really religious who never use profanity
except on rare occasions. All of them are respected and proficient.
It just works for me and it appears, expected? I'll ammend my
presentation according to the student and it seems to work fine. Isn't
that what being a teacher is all about? Teaching effectively?
I don't want to teach a student to beat the program. I want my
students to understand what they are trying to do within the program
and become proficient aviators. Thinking pilots rather than, robots.
My rationalization being, many years back (late 60's), I was focused
on autorotations and didn't hear anything my instructor said. After
that and a discussion, my personal technique became one of not letting
the student not hear me! Of course I like to think it is more refined
than that now Still, my students frequently tell me thay can still
hear me "chirping" in their ears while they are flying and staying
ahead of the events.
My son is just over 2 yrs old and flexing his new muscles and finding
his place in the world. I have to smack his little butt to let him
know when he reached the particular limit. Then he crawls into my lap,
wipes away his tears, grins at me and says "My Dadda"
Thats when it takes discipline to maintain ......... ggg
Best Professional and Personal Regards
Rocky Kemp
 




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