“Learn to Fly was born out of my move here to take care of my mom. I realized there was no learning institution for aviation at all in the entire tri-state area. The community was just so welcoming, and they encouraged me to do it and I haven’t regretted it since.”
Frankel discovered AOPA’s Flight Training Advantage web portal and iPad-based training platform, also known as AFTA. “I really felt like students need something to see, to help them evaluate how they’re progressing through their program. As soon as I saw AFTA, I knew it was the right program.”
What makes AFTA different than other flight training programs is that it adapts to each individual student’s progress and creates customized lesson plans.
“In a structured environment like an accelerated program or a university program where they have an outline that you have to follow,” Frankel said, “a lot of schools and independent instructors don’t have that, they have to kind of create their own thing. So AFTA allows you to create structure where there normally isn’t for the independent instructor or small flight school. It allows structure in an unstructured environment.”
Frankel says AFTA has been invaluable. “As an instructor, it’s helped me to focus on what I need to evaluate for my students, how to give them measurable goals and objectives and feedback for how they’re doing and how to move forward from that point. It also helps me remember what we talked about last. As an independent instructor you have several students you might not remember what you talked to that student about last, so it allows me to record what talked to them, go back and review it, and start from that point forward.”
A student pilot at Learn to Fly, Eric Depner, flies three times per week and says he likes how AFTA allows him to prepare for and debrief each lesson and stay organized.
“Before any lesson my instructor can put maneuvers that we’re going to practice, and then I can study those maneuvers. They’ll have little videos or readings for me to do that allow me to help study and practice for those maneuvers for the next lesson,” he said.
“After every flight, she gives you a little grade, and you can look at that within the ACS standards to see if you’re going to pass your practical or not. It allows students to be more in line with their instructors and the communication is really good between the instructor and the student.”
For other CFIs and flight school owners considering a new tool, Frankel says, “You don’t know it, but you need this. Try it, you will love it, you will not regret it.”
As Learn to Fly grows, Frankel hopes to hire more flight instructors, continue expanding Learn to Fly’s Fleet, and eventually make the school self-sufficient enough that she can pursue the airlines and continue to run the school. “The students are amazing! Helping people reach their goals and seeing how they light up when they achieve something. There’s nothing else that compares to it, it’s amazing, I really love it.”