Hi Rod: CFI, CFII, MEE-I,. I start flight instructing in 1990. about 1500 yrs dual given. You are my favorite instructor and I have stolen much of your techniques. 1st heard you speak in Washington State at aviation convention late 80's. I think that inspired me to switch careers from Engineering (Boeing) to airline pilot. Near mandatory pilot retirement, I will be teaching students seeking a rating. I have an Instrument student 18 yrs old. The new generation or this student in particular is a challenge..
Outstanding insight from one of the best CFIs in the business. Thanks for sharing your unique perspective on professionalism in flight instruction. We're all better off for having you on our side.
I had a very good instructor but one thing I wish he did differently was to be more consistent with his wording. For example when learning to land he would vary from saying "More/Less" to "back pressure" to "nose up" "pitch up" or "too much" and honestly my brain was a little busy so when he used a new term I didn't fully process it until after the landing. Or he would blurt out a whole sentence of instruction and I literally tuned it out until stopped on the taxi way. My advice for CFIs, come up with the terminology that you want to use, brief it with the student before flight (make sure they understand what "back pressure" even means) and then stick to it!
Excellent! I've used your stuff to great effect. The only thing I might add is that a good teacher adapts to the student's learning style/ability as best he/she can. For example, I learn best by DOING and then explaining it back to the teacher. When I can do that effectively, I own the information.
But you're not a good instructor, Rod. You are the *very best*! Each time I hear your voice I get nostalgia of Microsoft Flight Simulator. Best from Germany!
This was super helpful to watch, I just became an instructor about 2 months ago but I already have about 11 students, I’ve been figuring out how to teach as I go and have been looking for more resources on how to become a better teacher so I really appreciate the book recommendations!
Greetings Ayden: Thank you. There are plenty more books to read but this is where to start. And please consider joining my CFI Affiliate program at: rodmachado.com/pages/rod-machados-cfi-bgi-product-affiliate-program . Best, rod
I soloed in 8hrs, was supposed to solo in 6hrs, but my medical wasn't ready yet. I transitioned to tailwheel in 6hrs after my checkride. the only reason students don't solo by the 10hr mark is fear, incompetence, or outright greed. I start out teaching, by covering all the unnecessary equipment and instruments. I actually still prefer steam gauges over glass. Glass is good for navigation, not needed for anything else.
Where might I be able to find more about the research on less talking while instructing can help student outcomes? I want to try and integrate that into how I train but not sure how. Incredibly interesting…
Greetings Rok: To my knowledge there has never been a formal study on this issue. However, I observed instructors for 10 years teaching without a headset/intercom and observed them teaching for 40 years using a headset/intercom. The results are startlingly clear to me: Headsets are not an advantage if the instructor talks more than necessary. Period. This would be a good study for a graduate student to perform. Best, Rod
Greetings Larry: Purchase the "Education of a Wandering Man." It's an excellent book! The next book I'd read is, "Thinking Fast and Slow." It's a great read to learn practical psychology. Best, Rod
Provide food for the homeless and never lie. reverse all lies ever you told very important for the soul. Tell elder's to provide food for the poor and be a food servant and do this in person .lieing costs our soul. Tell nursing home elders
Hi Rod: CFI, CFII, MEE-I,. I start flight instructing in 1990. about 1500 yrs dual given. You are my favorite instructor and I have stolen much of your techniques. 1st heard you speak in Washington State at aviation convention late 80's. I think that inspired me to switch careers from Engineering (Boeing) to airline pilot. Near mandatory pilot retirement, I will be teaching students seeking a rating. I have an Instrument student 18 yrs old. The new generation or this student in particular is a challenge..
Greetings GMC:
I sure do appreciate the comment. So nice to hear that you made that change to aviation, too.
Best,
Rod
Outstanding insight from one of the best CFIs in the business. Thanks for sharing your unique perspective on professionalism in flight instruction. We're all better off for having you on our side.
Jamie, you are way too kind! Thank you!
Rod
One of the best instructors ever. Thank you!
Thank you, Jason.
Rod
I had a very good instructor but one thing I wish he did differently was to be more consistent with his wording. For example when learning to land he would vary from saying "More/Less" to "back pressure" to "nose up" "pitch up" or "too much" and honestly my brain was a little busy so when he used a new term I didn't fully process it until after the landing. Or he would blurt out a whole sentence of instruction and I literally tuned it out until stopped on the taxi way. My advice for CFIs, come up with the terminology that you want to use, brief it with the student before flight (make sure they understand what "back pressure" even means) and then stick to it!
Good point. This is why in my other video (The Five Step Teaching Process) says to define objectives in behavioral terms.
Best,
Rod
Excellent! I've used your stuff to great effect. The only thing I might add is that a good teacher adapts to the student's learning style/ability as best he/she can. For example, I learn best by DOING and then explaining it back to the teacher. When I can do that effectively, I own the information.
Greetings Tim:
That's a good strategy to use.
Best,
Rod
Thanks for continuing your channel. I appreciate the shared knowledge!
Wow. This was a goldmine of experience. ❤
Thank you!!
But you're not a good instructor, Rod. You are the *very best*! Each time I hear your voice I get nostalgia of Microsoft Flight Simulator. Best from Germany!
Thank you so much for that comment LTP! I appreciate it very much. And happy to hear from a FS fan, too. So nice.
Best,
Rod Machadoi
From one of the very best!!!
Thank you, Mark. Coming from you, that means a lot.
Best,
Rod
A true legend
Thank you so much for that very nice note.
Best,
Rod
This was super helpful to watch, I just became an instructor about 2 months ago but I already have about 11 students, I’ve been figuring out how to teach as I go and have been looking for more resources on how to become a better teacher so I really appreciate the book recommendations!
Greetings Ayden:
Thank you. There are plenty more books to read but this is where to start. And please consider joining my CFI Affiliate program at:
rodmachado.com/pages/rod-machados-cfi-bgi-product-affiliate-program
.
Best,
rod
Less is more, an excellent video Rod thank you !
Yes, sometimes less is more, especially with cockpit communications. Good point.
Best,
Rod
I had an instructor that covered up all of the instruments before my first solo. I should probably actually go back and do that again.
It's a good exercise, but do it with a CFI on board first since it's been a while.
Best,
Rod
I soloed in 8hrs, was supposed to solo in 6hrs, but my medical wasn't ready yet. I transitioned to tailwheel in 6hrs after my checkride.
the only reason students don't solo by the 10hr mark is fear, incompetence, or outright greed.
I start out teaching, by covering all the unnecessary equipment and instruments. I actually still prefer steam gauges over glass. Glass is good for navigation, not needed for anything else.
Where might I be able to find more about the research on less talking while instructing can help student outcomes? I want to try and integrate that into how I train but not sure how. Incredibly interesting…
Greetings Rok:
To my knowledge there has never been a formal study on this issue. However, I observed instructors for 10 years teaching without a headset/intercom and observed them teaching for 40 years using a headset/intercom. The results are startlingly clear to me: Headsets are not an advantage if the instructor talks more than necessary. Period. This would be a good study for a graduate student to perform.
Best,
Rod
Would you recommend these books to a non cfi pilot?
Greetings Larry:
Purchase the "Education of a Wandering Man." It's an excellent book! The next book I'd read is, "Thinking Fast and Slow." It's a great read to learn practical psychology.
Best,
Rod
Be more focused on the needs of your students than you are your hour building needs. Better yet, avoid becoming a CFI in the first place
Sir. Thank you. 00:43 ‘em books got plenty of pictures?
Few pictures, mostly words...but totally worth it.
Best,
Rod
I hate these AI images
Provide food for the homeless and never lie. reverse all lies ever you told very important for the soul. Tell elder's to provide food for the poor and be a food servant and do this in person .lieing costs our soul. Tell nursing home elders