Get extra lift from AOPA. Start your free membership trial today! Click here

NAFI launches professional development center

Initiative offers unique training for flight instructors

The National Association of Flight Instructors on July 24 announced the launch of a professional development program aimed at helping certificated flight instructors strengthen their marketing and customer service skills.

The National Association of Flight Instructors Professional Development Center at EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Jim Moore photo.

The educational seminars and scenario-based simulator training kicked off at EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. The program, which includes a mentoring area so that CFIs can have one-on-one discussions with subject matter experts, is intended to bolster flight instructors’ customer service and marketing skills, among others.

“Our goal is to make better flight instructors, help them to develop professionally, and we hope to make aviation better,” said NAFI Chairman Bob Meder.

The program was created in response to the dropout rate of student pilots, estimated to be as high as 80 percent.

“I don’t think there’s an issue with marketing to new students, but I think we have room as CFIs to help with the retention of existing students and customers,” said NAFI President Rick Todd.

The scenario-based simulator sessions are intended to provide real-life dual instruction challenges, with volunteer CFIs posing as students. They present instructors with “extreme behaviors and technical situations designed to assess their responses in how to manage these in-flight encounters,” NAFI said in a press release.

NAFI hopes to present its professional development programs at large airshows going forward, but in the interim the programs will be available free of charge to all flight instructors on the NAFI website. Most of the presentations are FAASTeam WINGS-approved, and several will be archived on FAASTeam TV.

Jill W. Tallman

Jill W. Tallman

AOPA Technical Editor
AOPA Technical Editor Jill W. Tallman is an instrument-rated private pilot who is part-owner of a Cessna 182Q.
Topics: Training and Safety, Training and Safety, EAA AirVenture

Related Articles