Blip16
Well-Known Member
actually some of it was due to procedures flying outside of UND, but a lot of it is from the instructing and just BS'ing with other instructors about their experiences. you can do this, try that, etc etcWait a minute… I highly doubt that the education at UND had anything to do with it. I would bet this “CFI learning curve” is experienced because you’re now teaching someone else this stuff. What worked for you might not (and sometimes will not) work for someone else’s learning style. What happens then? Well, you end up learning a whole lot of stuff from your students (also because you know you can’t BS [or I should say shouldn’t] BS a student information. No doubt changing seats/places/roles you’ll learn a lot… but, I really doubt it's because of UND’s education.
:::: I promise my UND “hat” is off, and I’m not just blowing smoke due to my affiliation with the school ::::
I really believe no matter where you received your instruction (or where you instruct) new CFI’s will experience this.![]()
things i have learned away from UND:
1. some places have no structure and it is a little scary to take their airplanes due to lack of any type of strict checkout procedures.
2. some places are extremely strict for checkouts and a UND stage check was almost easier
3. how to fuel an airplane (champ at CKN)
4. how to pull an airplane out of a hanger(CKN again)
there are a lot more, but i won't list them
at the end of the day, an airplane is an airplane, 100LL is 100LL, a C172 is slightly different than a PA28, but not too much, yadda yadda
and i don't regret learning to fly at UND, just the way i went about it, money spent, stage check system, lack of some of the experience you learn elsewhere. granted i am not in aviation to get that right seat in a jet with 200+ people behind me. i am in aviation for the love of it and am willing to fly just about anything as long as it is safe and will pay the bills