I'm a newly certified CFI-I and recently started at my first instructor job in a Part 61 flight school. I'm curious to hear what kind of training scenarios you use on the regular basis
Too many to count. Usually they involve situations the pilot might encounter with passengers, weather, and/or inoperative equipment. One of the key elements of a good scenario is that there is no "right" answer. Rather, it's a series of events that force the pilot to make decisions.
For example:
You and your friend have expensive tickets to a concert in Kansas City (about 150 miles away from my home airport). The weather is overcast at 1800. Your COM2 radio is inop. You'll be flying down in the day and returning late at night. Why would or wouldn't you make this trip?
You're on a cross country flight at dusk, building time for your instrument rating, about 75 miles away from your home base, when thunderstorms start developing between your present position and home airport. You have to be at work at 8 a.m. the next morning and your wife always gives you a hard time about how "impractical" flying is. What are your options? Do you divert. Spend the night in another town? Have somebody drive out and pick you up? Wait out the storms and fly home late at night? What are the services like late at night at the airport you're thinking of diverting to? How late is the FBO open?
On a local training flight, reduce the power to a level that will certainly not sustain level flight, but isn't a complete failure, either. See how do they handle it. Do they try to make it home? Put it down in a field underneath them?
...and how do you create new scenarios.
I feed off my own experiences as an instructor, ferry pilot, jump pilot, and listener of other pilots' stories. I tell a lot of, "There I was..." stories, then I let the client finish the scenario. Private pilot trainees end up dealing with crosswinds, navigating and diverting via pilotage at 500 AGL on XCs because "the clouds sure are getting low," explaining to "their friend" (me) why buzzing that house would be a bad idea, etc.
Instrument pilots end up flying more than just the required single 250 nm XC under IFR. We go in to all types of airports, copy clearances in every way imaginable, etc.
Commercial pilots have to decide if they'll ferry or test fly a plane with certain equipment inoperative.
CFI applicants get to hear about all the crazy scenarios other people have put me in and how I've gotten out of them. I give a lot of, "Client XYZ has been doing this, this, and this...are they safe to solo? How do you determine if you're able to sign a customer off for a flight review? What do you do if a pilot refuses to do stalls during a flight review?"
These are all the types of things I've personally experienced.
Also, in overall, what do you think about scenario based training?
Greatest thing since sliced bread. It's the only way to train that effectively develops a pilot's *decision making* skills. Any monkey can takeoff and land. The reason most pilots get into trouble is because they didn't recognize and prevent poor decisions. Scenario based training addresses these "softer" skills needed to be a safe pilot.
One of the tough things, that you're probably already seeing, is a freshly minted instructor doesn't have much experience to draw from when they start teaching. If you're coming out of a big flight academy, the trickiest thing you might have personally experienced was, "One time my instructor and I flew into Class B airspace."
That's fine. Talk to the old farts around the airport and find out what tough spots they've been in, then imagine some ways to prevent your clients from putting themselves in the same spot in the future. Before long you'll have plenty of stories yourself.
Have fun teaching. Just the fact that you bothered to ask about this topic tells me you'll be a darn good instructor!