desertdog71
Girthy Member
I am looking for some suggested reading to prepare for my CFI. Mainly in the Fundementals of Instruction portion. Any suggestions would be great.
jrh said:From everything I've read from you on here it sounds like you're a top notch pilot, but I'd have to say, even for the best private pilot, don't bother with CFI stuff yet. You'll get it naturally with time if you just work hard and really truly learn everything possible during each rating. Also, the FOI stuff is mostly common sense. You can study it over the course of a couple weeks and be fine. It's important, but it's not heavy, intense stuff either. The Gleim FOI written exam test prep book, in conjunction with picking the brains of experienced instructors, is all I ever used and it was fine.
Here's a piece of advice I wish that more private pilots took to heart--and with you, I think you're already doing it, which is awesome: push yourself to experience as much as possible. Do things just for the sake of doing them. Fly at night so that you get really comfortable with night illusions. Fly in busy airspace so you get used to managing the cockpit. Fly to the aircraft's absolute ceiling just to find out how it compares to the POH. Fly a few long trips (3, 4, even 500+ miles). Fly off of grass strips. Fly solo to build confidence. Fly with your friends and family to learn how to deal with distractions. Fly with other pilots to get used to working as a crew. Fly in ridiculously hot weather and ridiculously cold weather. Once you're instrument rated, go IFR sometimes no matter if the weather is good or bad. Try to learn something new on every flight you go on.
Experience will make you a better instructor than almost any book you'll read. You can get a CFI ticket with less than 20 hours of solo time and without hardly ever going more than 51 miles from your home base. But I guarantee you, CFIs like that suck. Go out and use your licenses to the fullest extent possible and everything will fall into place when you become a CFI.
jrh said:From everything I've read from you on here it sounds like you're a top notch pilot, but I'd have to say, even for the best private pilot, don't bother with CFI stuff yet. You'll get it naturally with time if you just work hard and really truly learn everything possible during each rating. Also, the FOI stuff is mostly common sense. You can study it over the course of a couple weeks and be fine. It's important, but it's not heavy, intense stuff either. The Gleim FOI written exam test prep book, in conjunction with picking the brains of experienced instructors, is all I ever used and it was fine.
Here's a piece of advice I wish that more private pilots took to heart--and with you, I think you're already doing it, which is awesome: push yourself to experience as much as possible. Do things just for the sake of doing them. Fly at night so that you get really comfortable with night illusions. Fly in busy airspace so you get used to managing the cockpit. Fly to the aircraft's absolute ceiling just to find out how it compares to the POH. Fly a few long trips (3, 4, even 500+ miles). Fly off of grass strips. Fly solo to build confidence. Fly with your friends and family to learn how to deal with distractions. Fly with other pilots to get used to working as a crew. Fly in ridiculously hot weather and ridiculously cold weather. Once you're instrument rated, go IFR sometimes no matter if the weather is good or bad. Try to learn something new on every flight you go on.
Experience will make you a better instructor than almost any book you'll read. You can get a CFI ticket with less than 20 hours of solo time and without hardly ever going more than 51 miles from your home base. But I guarantee you, CFIs like that suck. Go out and use your licenses to the fullest extent possible and everything will fall into place when you become a CFI.
gypsimac said:Hey, I'm at the closing phases of my Comm Ticket, and haven't read one book on being a flight instructor yet, but I have been an animal trainer for some time. It may seem unrelated, and to some it may even seem irrational to correlate animal training with human training, but the principles are synonymous.
Check out a book called "Don't Shoot the Dog"
Another great selection is "Whale Done"
Reading these may put an unexpected spin on your teaching/learning art. After reading those and experiencing what I have with people and their pets, I am REALLY looking forward to instructing!!! :nana2:
desertdog71 said:Its useful for more than just CFI work. Might do some good with my children or something, you never know.