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Knowledge of the fundamentals of instructing is a common
requirement for all flight instructors. The FAA has produced FAA-H-8083-9, "Aviation Instructor's Handbook" to provide information about this subject. For US FAA instructors, the standard for teaching is outlined in http://www.fergworld.com/cfi/pdf/FOI..._Reference.pdf The Gleim FOI prep book is excellent and cheap ($9 or so). From reading some of the posts, it seems some students do not get enough explanation or demonstration before being asked to do the manuever (and then doing it wrong). It is much better to do it right the first time (the Law of Primacy). I like and use the technique of programmed instruction, and do my best to get students to do things right the first time. Key to this has been having the students tell me what to do while I fly the plane, or sometimes dividing duties (they do flaps and I do stick) so they aren't overwhelmed. Teaching is rich with techniques, principles, and diversity. When you find an instructor that fits your best way of learning, you'll feel comfortable. |
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I'm surprised it has not been mentioned here yet. Excellent books exist on
"what, why, how and when" to do the things needed to fly a glider, step-by-step. Read the "lesson for the day", discuss it, then go fly it with an Instructor, then ask for explanations about what actually happened. Being proactive requires knowlege. "Gliding" by Piggott, "Flying Sailplanes" by Reichmann, and "Glider Basics" by Knauff are such books. Buy them all if you can. Cheer up-there is a "learning plateau" period from time to time, which usually occurs just before the "breakthrough". -- Hartley Falbaum, CFIG "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:3f982d4f$1@darkstar... Knowledge of the fundamentals of instructing is a common requirement for all flight instructors. The FAA has produced FAA-H-8083-9, "Aviation Instructor's Handbook" to provide information about this subject. For US FAA instructors, the standard for teaching is outlined in http://www.fergworld.com/cfi/pdf/FOI..._Reference.pdf The Gleim FOI prep book is excellent and cheap ($9 or so). From reading some of the posts, it seems some students do not get enough explanation or demonstration before being asked to do the manuever (and then doing it wrong). It is much better to do it right the first time (the Law of Primacy). I like and use the technique of programmed instruction, and do my best to get students to do things right the first time. Key to this has been having the students tell me what to do while I fly the plane, or sometimes dividing duties (they do flaps and I do stick) so they aren't overwhelmed. Teaching is rich with techniques, principles, and diversity. When you find an instructor that fits your best way of learning, you'll feel comfortable. |
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On Sun, 02 Nov 2003 03:43:12 GMT, "HL Falbaum"
wrote: I'm surprised it has not been mentioned here yet. Excellent books exist on "what, why, how and when" to do the things needed to fly a glider, step-by-step. Read the "lesson for the day", discuss it, then go fly it with an Instructor, then ask for explanations about what actually happened. Being proactive requires knowlege. "Gliding" by Piggott, "Flying Sailplanes" by Reichmann, and "Glider Basics" by Knauff are such books. Buy them all if you can. Cheer up-there is a "learning plateau" period from time to time, which usually occurs just before the "breakthrough". Best to read 'Beginning Gliding' by Derek Piggott before tackling 'Gliding'. The latter is more use as you approach solo standard. -- martin@ : Martin Gregorie gregorie : Harlow, UK demon : co : Zappa fan & glider pilot uk : |
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