Australian Flying

Bringing it all together

We have been gathering the tools you’ll need to be the best damn instructor around.

First, a reminder of what you have already got, and then I will show you how to put it together in such a way that future airline captains and astronauts will brag, in hushed tones of course, that they have your name in their logbooks.

So here’s a slightly random summary of the tools you have at the moment.

A lecture-room full of the right stuff – projectors and so on.

A head bursting with book-knowledge, experience and enthusiasm.

A working knowledge of the famous What Why How teaching technique.

The habit of finding emotional glue to make things memorable – like the story of Scully’s spinning lecture from a few months ago.

Here’s the gist of that again:

Scully was briefing half a dozen SAAF, Harvard pupils before they were to do their first dual spins.

He had talked them through the HASELLL checks, throttling back the big, noisy radial and easing the great rounded nose well above the horizon. He took his time to describe the smell of avgas, oil and exhaust smoke and the way the aircraft felt as if it were balancing on a pinnacle as it started to shudder and rattle.

Then wham. Your

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Flying

Australian Flying1 min read
Western Sydney Airport to get Digital Tower
WSI will operate as a digitised airport, with more than 20 high-resolution cameras monitoring the airport and immediate airspace, with vision transmitted to a central Digital Aerodrome Service (DAS), to be located at Eastern Creek. CDC and Frequentis
Australian Flying9 min read
A Race Against Time
It was April 2021, and the world was in the grips of a pandemic. International lockdowns had spread almost as fast as the virus. State curfews, hospitalisations and total global uncertainty abounded as new variants were discovered at an alarming rate
Australian Flying3 min read
A Higher Purpose
Born in Hong Kong, Kennedy moved to Melbourne when he was 13 and did his masters of physiotherapy at La Trobe University. “I was seeing about 60-70 patients a week,” he says, when he found himself wanting to take a career sabbatical. As he was feelin

Related Books & Audiobooks