We have this in our company Standard Operating Procedures section where we talk about who controls which switches during different phases of flight:
Yes, we have the same... it falls into the who CFI'd and who didn't. It seems that those who never were really in command while having more than 1 person up front, don't seem to mind. If the bulk of your PIC time is from flying with an instructor, then you don't really dig the CRM stuff yet. As a CFI you get used to stating switch positions so the student learns why you are doing something. That transfers to the 121 cockpit, without even thinking about it.
When you were receiving dual in a 172, you just put the lights on, b/c it was in a checklist. you could verbalize... or not.
The hard part for us right now, is that they changed the flows and checklists... so they have contradicting info. The through 10,000 climb flow calls for seatbelt sign off conditions permitting, but in our book, it says seatbelts on until reaching cruise altitude.
I pretty much always say book first, profiles second, so i want that switch on until cruise. Reality is, if somebody gets hurt in the back when the sign is off, I am going to be doing the carpet dance... so in the interest of my hide... tell me before you move it.
------------Drift----------
We also have it broken down into hand flying vs. auto flight etc. Part of the problem is that we just got a brand new CFM, with all new profiles, procedures, checklists, call outs and some new limits without ANY training. They handed it out, gave us a 25 question online test, and said here you go. I had the book for 1 DAY before it was in use. It's another story, and a large bull pile, but for another thread. Where that ties into this tread, If i had to face that, with a brand new, 250 hr FO who was hanging to the tail of the airplane by his teeth, it would be a MESS. With two of us up front with over 3,000 hours combined in the q400, it was a MESS.
-----------Back---------
I was luck with the new book to have a guy that had lots of time. He was able to think outside the box a bit, and acomplish his items when it made sense, and in a safe manner. I had to watch my stuff pretty tight, so I didn't have a lot of mental space left to be watching the guy next to me. Having somebody that was mature enough to know how to act, and experienced enough to do it right was a blessing.
I know lots of guys that were super low time FO's. They are good guys. I had the pleasure of flying with a bunch of them as soon as I upgraded in the 1900... 2 of us going into LGA, pretty much for the first time, Me brand new to the left seat, FO brand new to everything... we made a lot of small mistakes, and we got lucky. I don't want to go through that again.
Some of us are making a stink about it.. but, hey... "we fixed it."
*edit*
I know my G.U.M sucks... i'll fix it later when i can put some time to my thoughts.