ppragman
FLIPY FLAPS!
I agree with Ryan -- I think you'd have a hard time making an argument that instructing GA flying is representative of the rest of the flying world.
The good news is that airmanship is that fuzzy quality we all gain from our experience and largely transcends the aircraft or type of flying we do. A CFI is going to gain loads of airmanship related to a number of different disciplines from human nature, to social interaction, to other aviation decisionmaking -- all very good stuff. Certainly, there are types of experience and judgment that a pilot is going to gain as a GA CFI that develop him as an airman and make him poised for success in other professional flying environments.
But, let's not get carried away; that airmanship in and of itself isn't the end-all be-all of "experience" that a pilot will gain in those other areas. No more than my experience as a pointy-nosed fast-mover pilot endows me with some kind of omniscient 4G situational awareness that means I can step into any other aircraft at any time and instantly be the ace-of-the-base. Like the CFI, I have operated most of my career in a relatively small portion of the overall aviation pie, and there is a lot to experience outside of that bubble.
Very good post. I agree with this wholeheartedly.
I've always thought about it a little like this:
Variation of Experience + <nebulous factor relating to how challenging that flying was> x (Total Time) + Amount of Stick and Rudder in that flying + whatever nature v. nurture factor is true = pilot skill.
Airmanship and decision making skills on the other hand are a little different.
Airmanship = ((How Many Times you've nearly pissed yourself) + (How much experience you have))/(how quickly you catch on)