Definition
The instructor's process of selecting an assessment approach that fits the specific learning objective, student level, and training situation, so that the assessment accurately measures whether the student has met the standard and supports continued learning.
Plain English
Picking the right way to check how a student is doing, based on what they are supposed to be learning and where they are in their training.
Context Anchor
Seen when an aviation instructor plans a lesson, checks a learner’s progress, or decides whether the learner is ready to move on.
Derivation
Assess comes from a Latin idea meaning “to sit beside.” That helps here because assessment is not just giving a score; it is the instructor closely observing the learner and judging what the learner understands or can do.
Why Pilots Care
Matching the assessment to the objective prevents gaps in training that could affect flight safety or lead to failed checkrides.
Intuition Check
Do not assume assessment means only a written test. In flight training, the best assessment may be a question, a discussion, a scenario, or watching the learner perform a task.
Example Sentence 1
When planning the lesson on crosswind landings, the instructor spent time choosing an effective assessment method, settling on a structured post-flight debrief paired with a short oral review.
Example Sentence 2
After the lesson on crosswind landings, choosing an effective assessment method meant watching the student perform the maneuver rather than asking oral questions.