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The FAA criteria for a CFI-G in the US are apparently
based on old criteria from the 1920s and 1930s with some updating in the pursuit of safety. In my view, it would be useful if the SSA devised two or three levels of SSA Instructor recognition similar to the BGA standards. I don't believe I would base this on badges; we have many pilots who fly cross country but don't bother with SSA badges. Further, in the proper location, one can earn all the diamonds without having made a dozen X/C flights, and further still, one could have earned the badges decades ago and not have done any X/C flying since that time. I believe some combination of total hours of X/C, the number of X/C flights, total distance flown, and recency of this experience would provide a better indicator of qualifications. We already have SSA Instructor, and SSA Master Instructor; why not elaborate that a bit and give it more publicity and status? At 20:12 26 April 2007, Andy wrote: On Apr 25, 7:10 am, 126Driver wrote: Would a USA instructor easily qualify as a BGA instructor. Or would they need additional training. My experience of this is over 20 years ago. I returned to UK after earning my US CFI, Gold, and 2 diamonds and with 150 hours in my log book was quickly granted a UK assistant instructor rating. I probably was not given a full briefing on the restrictions as the CFI ( the C is Chief for the US folks)had a little word with me after I soloed a student without talking to him first. I did some training at Lasham for full cat and would have received it except that I got tired watching the rain while I waited in the hope of flying and returned to US. Andy |
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Not directly on topic, but a variation of a review of training philosophy.
http://www.gfa.org.au/ops/training.php |
#3
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Overview of the BGA system, for the interested:
http://www.gliding.co.uk/bgainfo/ins...quirements.htm Dan |
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On Apr 27, 7:07 pm, Dan G wrote:
Overview of the BGA system, for the interested: http://www.gliding.co.uk/bgainfo/ins...quirements.htm And further, explaining the limitations on what a BI can teach: http://www.gliding.co.uk/forms/Basic...nformation.pdf |
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