Flight International - 10 April 2018

(Grace) #1

ightglobal.com 10-16 April 2018 | Flight International | 29


TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT
Digital technology

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management skills, crew resource manage-
ment ability, and what he calls “maturity and
attitude”. The ATPG’s answer to the deficit is
effectively a course extension to the commer-
cial pilot licence/instrument rating training
course, adding high quality multi-crew co-op-
eration (MCC) and jet orientation courses
(JOC). Unlike off-the-peg MCC/JOC, this in-
cludes simulator instruction in the style of
line-oriented flight training, plus advanced
knowledge consolidation ground-school. The
result is a course dubbed the Airline Pilot Cer-
tificate Course, which Ryanair requires all of
its own new recruits to go through.
This is an admission that the present sys-
tem, as designed, does not work well enough


for airlines which expect pilots with licences
to arrive on the line completely trained.
Although improving the effectiveness of
pilot ab initio and recurrent training has been
much discussed at forums such as the Royal
Aeronautical Society’s annual International
Flight Crew Training Conference (IFCTC)
over the past decade, until recently the focus
has continued to be directed at making “better
pilots” in the traditional sense, and on react-
ing to the kind of accidents that continue to
happen, rather than on preparing pilots to be
experts in understanding and manipulating
the high-technology cockpit tools with which
they manage flights today.
But this year’s conference (25-26 Septem-

ber) plans to home in on the human interface
with technology, and on competency-based
training. As national aviation authorities
move towards “performance-based regula-
tion” rather than the traditional prescriptive
kind of rulemaking, it will also be taking a
look at training quality oversight.
Even aircraft with fourth-generation highly
automated flightdecks need pilots with tradi-
tional skills because, as the notorious exam-
ple of Air France flight 447 (LOC-I over the
South Atlantic in June 2009) demonstrated,
the automation is programmed to trip out if
the system recognises it is receiving faulty
sensor data. And that will, inevitably, contin-
ue to happen from time to time.

Airbus

With the A350, Airbus introduced
state-of-the-art digital flightdeck and
a bold new concept of type-rating
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