by beaky » Thu Feb 09, 2006 2:33 pm
That sounds familiar... could be the instructor, could be you... if you think review is unheard-of in primary training, you need to talk to more licensed pilots- it's quite common, whatever the cause may be.
And the one thing missing from your account is the part where you confronted your instructor with your opinions... I'm not suggesting you get all up in his face, just ask "why this?" and "why that?" I'm surprised he didn't debrief you post-flight; something along the lines of "I'm marking you incomplete because..."
You did discuss all this with him, right?
Somehow I have a hunch you didn't, and that is a mistake. Trust me, I know. Took me a while to start speaking up, and I'm glad I did- although you'd better be prepared emotionally to be corrected with sound reasoning...
I almost get the impression from your latest post that you are a little too confident (MCA work, for example, is not something you do once then get checked off on; a CFI may want to see you do it over and over until you can very consistently handle the plane in this most critical mode of flight). Not accusing you of that; just an impression.
I had an instructor for a while (one of five, over 2 years) who, although very professional and knowledgeable, used to drive me nuts by jumping the gun on me- I was always 0.3 seconds too late with things for his liking, and instead of saying anything, he'd grab the yoke or mess with a radio, etc. I finally had to ask him to just give me more time; my reasoning was that it did me no good for him to complete tasks or make corrections for me: provided safety wasn't an issue (and it never was in those cases), he should give me a chance to either show I knew my stuff, or that I was definitely screwing up and he should intervene. And I insisted that he interfere verbally only, except in an emergency.
He didn't like that, but he tried it... my performance improved, and things got a lot more friendly between us after that. Mutual respect, etc. And if one of us had to run after a lesson, we always took a few minutes to review the last lesson next time we met up.
So if you haven't already, take a chance and open up to your instructor. Think your rebuttals through carefully before you speak... you need more ammo than "I think I'm ready, I did it OK once, sign me off, etc.".
For example: your assertion that holding or turning to a heading in MCA w/o a good visual reference is very difficult is a reasonable one, however, he may very well say:
"What's wrong with the DG? Didn't you know your heading when you began the maneuver? What if someday soon after your checkride you find yourself flying slowly, in marginal VFR, over water or flat terrain? Etc., etc.!!" He's done mofre studying and flying than you, and more importantly, he's dealt with more students-and more instructors!- than you have. You're out-gunned, big-time.
You see what I mean...? Think before you speak, and listen to his answers. But definitely speak up- the debrief should be considered very important (best to not argue too much in flight), and even if you agree to disagree, the rest of your training might be more productive and enjoyable for both of you.
But... if you try all this (or have already) and you are still convinced he's "milking" you or is just a dumbass, go over his head with a formal complaint.
Last edited by
beaky on Thu Feb 09, 2006 2:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.