nosehair
Well-Known Member
Right. And this area of debate is, or should be, over the level of knowledge required after solo, or more precisely, during the advanced portion of flight training.There are two different "debates" happening here:
1. Should some basic level of the math be taught...
2. Does a person who has all of the same training, plus the math, have a better overall understanding of flight.
The initial discussion was:
Did anyone else read Rod Machado's article in the latest AOPA Pilot mag? Cliff's Notes: One thing we could do to improve student retention is cut some of the extra crap in syllabi and work on getting back to the days of the 10-hour student solo.
This debate has centered on how much of the 'extra crap' we should include. Save that for after solo.
While the military pilot schools do include some heavy math, they don't pile it on during pre-solo flight training. That period of training is centered around eye-hand skills, simulator mock-ups, buddy flights, etc. A total round-the-clock immersion in flight line gymnastics. The bookwork comes later, or maybe earlier, but not right at that time.
Civilian flight training rarely devotes a sufficient amount of attention to basic skills during pre-solo; the 'system' causes the CFI to try to present all training right out of the PTS, so that too much information is presented in the beginning, and basic skills (the trees) are not trained to an habitual level before trying to create a private pilot or beyond, the forest.
I'm not in favor of decreasing training time to get a PP, nor necessarily in favor of soloing in the shortest time, but I am in favor of decreasing the attendant 'noise' that has crept into pre-solo primary training.
What's learned first is learned best. When the student sees all the attention going to checklists and getting the atis and making sure you're on the right freq and looking for this and that and what are you doing give me that I didn't say touch that...
By the time you've gotten to altitude away from the tower and off freq, the student has tried to soak up so much, his head is spinning and he isn't going to be impressed much by holding the yoke and making some turns.
Or feeeeling the controls go soft as you slow...
...liiisten to the sound as...
Those basic skills. Where did they go?
Too much extra crap.