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kallend 2,026
QuoteThat said, just because someone is good at something doesn't mean they're able to teach others what they know. it's not uncommon to find someone with lesser knowledge be the better teacher, simply because they have an innate ability to teach. ***
I just want to make sure I understand your point. Do you think it is ok for someone who doesn't have a lot of experience to teach someone how fly a ws just because they talk well?
TALK is not equal to TEACH. TEACH is not equal to TALK. Confusing the two is a big error on your part.
I have been a professional educator for 37 years and a pilot for longer. If I wish to become a FAA rated flying instructor (which I don't) I am automatically exempted from the having to take the "teaching skills" part of the requirements for a CFI by virtue of my teaching experience.
OTOH if I want to be a USPA coach (which I don't), I have to take a course on teaching methodology.
The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.
DSE 5
QuoteThat said, just because someone is good at something doesn't mean they're able to teach others what they know. it's not uncommon to find someone with lesser knowledge be the better teacher, simply because they have an innate ability to teach. ***
I just want to make sure I understand your point. Do you think it is ok for someone who doesn't have a lot of experience to teach someone how fly a ws just because they talk well?
No, that's not my point. There is a point at which someone has skills that qualify them to instruct. Where that point is (I believe) cannot be qualified. Kallend talks about how he's exempt from having to certify for this or that, IMO, that's just as far off the mark. Time in sport does not equal experience, and does not grant the authority nor ability to teach. Skill, currency, etc all add up to those things, IMO.
But...once that point is reached, there are more highly experienced people that may well not be able to teach, and significantly lesser experienced that are skilled, but are far more qualified to teach.
On your other topic, there are two of us at Z hills with over 2000 wingsuit flights.
kallend 2,026
QuoteQuoteThat said, just because someone is good at something doesn't mean they're able to teach others what they know. it's not uncommon to find someone with lesser knowledge be the better teacher, simply because they have an innate ability to teach. ***
I just want to make sure I understand your point. Do you think it is ok for someone who doesn't have a lot of experience to teach someone how fly a ws just because they talk well?
No, that's not my point. There is a point at which someone has skills that qualify them to instruct. Where that point is (I believe) cannot be qualified. Kallend talks about how he's exempt from having to certify for this or that, IMO, that's just as far off the mark. Time in sport does not equal experience, and does not grant the authority nor ability to teach. .
I think you misunderstand what I wrote. The FAA in its wisdom exempts professional teachers (like me) from having to take the teaching skills part of the training to be a flight instructor (CFI). WHY? Because a few hours of very basic instruction on teaching methodology geared towards non-teachers who want to be CFIs is not going to have any value for someone who is already an experienced teacher.
OTOH the USPA thinks that my 37 years as a teacher (with 5 Excellence in Teaching Awards hanging on my office wall) is no match for the teaching methodology part of its 3 day USPA coach course.
The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.
Oh the horror! You might have to take the same course as everyone else if you want a rating! How awful! USPA SUX!
The teaching skills part of the coach course is repetitive to anyone that's read the coach section of the IRM too... I think I had to come to the course with the written test completed. Then we spent an entire day learning the material on the test that we'd already passed. That was... fun.
Dave
You right, Glen. I think that is wrong myself.
www.PrecisionSkydiving.com
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