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Ground School Presentation Materials

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towpi...@gmail.com

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Jan 13, 2018, 9:23:27 PM1/13/18
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Hi All,

I am a fairly new CFI-G, just completed my second season teaching.
at a small but growing club. One area of opportunity we have for improvement is in preparing our students for the written and oral exams. To help with this I am thinking of running my first ground school.

I am looking for Ground School Presentation Materials. PowerPoint Slides and/or other electronic media I can use to produce PowerPoint presentations. I found some for Airplanes that could be purchased but not for Gliders.

This is a club environment, so Instructors and Tow Pilots don't get paid. I am willing to spend some money for materials, but free would be better as it will be coming out of my own pocket. Yes, I could pass on some of the cost to the students, but would prefer not too, if possible. In either case paid or free let me know what you recommend.

Thanks
Bill

Burt Compton - Marfa Gliders, west Texas

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Jan 13, 2018, 10:28:32 PM1/13/18
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The Soaring Safety Foundation (SSF), the training and safety unit of the Soaring Society of America, has free videos and more at www.soaringsafety.org

I can also recommend Bob Wander's brilliant "Safer Soaring" booklet for a "Reader's Digest" style collection of his eloquent seminars and SSA Convention presentations. Short, to the point, from which you could develop training segments for students and experienced glider pilots alike.

The 10 topics include new concepts regarding airplane versus glider landing patterns, the surprising effects of a sinking airmass on high-performance sailplanes, towplane upsets due to glider "kiting" and much more.

Also consider Wander's "Learning To Fly Gliders" booklet, a concise syllabus for CFIG lesson plans, common student errors, etc. Typical Bob Wander writing excellence -- to the point, enjoyable to read for the CFIG, the student and for any pilot wanting a review.

For Towpilot initial training, initial endorsement and their 24 month re-endorsements per FAR 61.69, the only book written about towing gliders is "The Towpilot Manual."

Find all of these inexpensive booklets and many more at www.bobwander.com

Chat with Bob Wander at the SSA Convention in Reno, NV, FEB 28 - March 3, 2018.

Find me hosting the SSF Seminar on Wednesday, FEB 28 at 6 PM in the Atlantis Hotel ballroom and around the Soaring Safety Foundation booth in the SSA Convention hall.

Burt Compton
CFI, FAA Designated Pilot Examiner
Marfa Gliders, southwest Texas.
(Over 50 years in soaring and always learning -- Hey, I'm still just the kid on the airport!)

ssa....@gmail.com

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Jan 14, 2018, 12:47:47 PM1/14/18
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I second all of Burt's excellent recommendations.

===

For written test preparation, I usually recommend the Pilot Prepware materials from A.S.A. (Aviation Supplies & Academics).

http://www.asa2fly.com/Pilot-Prepware-Software-C21.aspx

While targeted toward self-study, these materials could certainly be used in a ground school setting.

For audio/video effect, I highly recommend a DVD from Sporty's Pilot Shop entitled "So You Want to Fly Gliders" starring none other than, you guessed it, Bob Wander. This DVD has more glider-related flight/knowledge information packing into a tighter package than any resource I have ever experienced. I have owned it for years and still review it regularly. It is amazing.

===

For the Oral portion of the practical test, I use and recommend this technique:

Use the Private Pilot Glider Practical Test Standard (PTS) as the study guide and syllabus. As the ground school instructor, work with a glider DPE to develop representative questions for each Objective/Task with each Area of Operation. Document the source(s) of the answers to those questions. These sources then become the library of documents your students should acquire and take with them to the oral. In your ground school sessions, progressively work through the entire PTS, eating the elephant one bite (AoO, Task, Obj.) at a time.

As with any instructional endeavor, the first time through will be the most labor intensive. The results will be worth the effort. One of my students was actually contacted by his DPE after the practical test and told the DPE had never experienced an applicant better prepared for an oral.



2G

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Jan 19, 2018, 1:17:46 AM1/19/18
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You could always buy a copy of the FAA's Glider Flying Handbook and scan the graphics and tables for presentation purposes. No copyright infringement as we all own it.

https://www.amazon.com/Glider-Handbook-Federal-Aviation-Administration/dp/1632206994/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1516342332&sr=1-1&keywords=glider+pilot+training

Tom

clint....@gmail.com

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Jan 19, 2018, 2:14:10 AM1/19/18
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clint....@gmail.com

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Jan 19, 2018, 3:10:18 AM1/19/18
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russel...@gmail.com

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Jan 19, 2018, 5:03:06 PM1/19/18
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Bill,

I have developed many illustrations that I use with students. They are included in my online course, Guide to Becoming a CFI-G at GLIDERBOOKS ACADEMY which you can view here - https://academy.gliderbooks.com/courses/guide-to-becoming-a-cfi-g. If you pay for the course, you are allowed to use the materials to teach your own students, including ground schools.

Let me know if you have any questions.

Russell Holtz

On Saturday, January 13, 2018 at 6:23:27 PM UTC-8, towpi...@gmail.com wrote:

Jamie Shore

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Jan 22, 2018, 7:33:17 AM1/22/18
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mdfa...@gmail.com

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Jan 22, 2018, 8:29:21 AM1/22/18
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Here is a trove of information courtesy of Doug Jacobs.

http://www.dragonnorth.com/djpresentations/

Mike

uncl...@ix.netcom.com

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Jan 22, 2018, 9:08:22 AM1/22/18
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Excellent information on this site with many well prepared presentations.
That said, most are on topics intended for more advanced instruction than that needed for prep for PP certificate training.
I've used some of these several times and they are a great resource.
UH

JD Williams

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Jan 22, 2018, 9:09:09 AM1/22/18
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Hi Bill,

I used Russell Holtz's books with my club instructors when I was starting out. The chapters are well structured and the quizzes at the end help drive discussion as well as provide sense of mastery of the material. For the flying part, the checklists of skills is helpful to show the student how they are progressing, is a good post lesson day review and guide to what to work on for the next lesson, and if your club has multiple instructors is a good way for instructors to know where the student is before starting the training day. I found them to be valuable references during and after training.

Condor can also be an effective presentation tool!

Thank you for taking the time and initiative to become an instructor and help grow our ranks!

J.D.

towpi...@gmail.com

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Jan 23, 2018, 10:34:59 PM1/23/18
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Thanks everyone for all the great information.

Bill

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