We Help You Pass
Our free online study guide really works. You can study for your FAA private pilot ground school exam right now. For more info about the 4VFR.COM project, click here. You can find a daily update log here.

Live ATC Audio Streams
Tune into live air traffic control frequencies from North America. This feature requires Real player. Start listening to ATC now!

Reference Library
Our glossary lists and databases have grown quickly. I am working to create an on-line reference library to tie together all the loose ends. You can check out what is currently available in the library

FAA Practice Exam - New!
Introducing our newly enhanced practice exam. Now with figures!. Take a test a day for a week, and I guarantee you will do better on your exam.

Get Started Now

Show your support for 4VFR.COM - Link us. Bookmark us. Tell your mother about us. Press CTRL-D to bookmark this site now!. Check out one of our proposed T-Shirt Designs.

Exams Taken 992,081

Feature Article: Not Making Progress?

I doubt that there is a pilot flying who has not at one time or another felt the twinge of doubt that his learning curve is not going well. The emotions involved can run the gamut, self-doubt, blame, resentment, and anger. Quit, seek support, change instructors, and kick the dog are typical initial reactions.

We begin expecting that flying will be much as we have seen it in the media and read in books. We often assume that our prior experience and even expertise in another field will transfer into flying and expedite the learning process. Not so. A very important part of learning to fly is to unlearn all the preconceptions we have acquired since childhood. It is very difficult to overcome first learned ideas. We are very used to adding power to go faster. Yet, just adding power to an airborne airplane makes it go slower. Pointing an airplane up does not mean that it is going or will go up. Instinctive reactions can be very dangerous when applied to flying airplanes. Illusions exist and will be believed by even the best of pilots.

Much of the difficulty in giving flight instruction arises from communication problems. The instructor has acquired an experience 'bank' from his own training and teaching. The instructor's problem is to fit his knowledge and presentation of it into your learning requirements. The student is not a blank slate. As the previous paragraph indicates the student is loaded with flying information. The student doesn't know what he doesn't know. What he knows he knows may be all the way from totally correct in concept and application to just the opposite and anywhere in between.

This is the 'playing field' of flight instruction. The student and instructor must communicate information and understanding back and forth. This communication can be verbal, demonstration, emotional and even extra-sensory. Instructors want every student to be a successful student. Every student wants to succeed. When it doesn't work out it is most often a failure to communicate.


Last Modified June 3, ©2026 TAGE.COM

Related Links
Featured Articles
  • Controlled Airport Radio
  • What to expect on your first solo
  • Ground Procedures - Taxiing Renewal
  • The Compass
  • Teaching The FAA Way
  • Pilot Error 50 Years Ago
  • Areas of Failure
  • Written Tests
  • What's New
  • First Flight Preparations
  • The Johnson Bar
  • The Last Thing You Learn
  • Run-up
  • About Questions
  • FAR 61.35(a)(f) and 61 105(a) Aeronautical knowledge

    More Flight Training Articles...

  • Student Kudos
    "I have to say this site is amazing. I congratulate you for this. I`m looking forward to see the development of this site. I dont have a lot of money and is always been a dream for me to learn to fly, and i think this site is unbeliavable, becouse i can learn so much from this. Actually i have learned a lot flying flightsim and asking question and now this site is going to help even more. "
    - Fabian De Simone