Definition
The stages of a student pilot's training where the risk of an accident, incident, or significant learning setback is highest, and where the flight instructor must remain especially alert and ready to intervene. These commonly include the first solo, solo cross-country flights, night flying, and operations in unfamiliar or demanding conditions.
Plain English
The points in a student's training where things are most likely to go wrong, so the instructor pays extra close attention and is ready to step in if needed.
Context Anchor
Seen in flight instructor guidance about how experienced instructors manage student progress, motivation, safety, and readiness during training.
Derivation
‘Critical’ comes from the Greek ‘kritikos,’ meaning ‘able to judge’ or ‘decisive.’ In aviation it carries the sense of a decisive moment — one where outcomes hinge on careful judgment and timing.
Why Pilots Care
Errors here can quickly become accidents, so proper instructor focus prevents incidents.
Intuition Check
Do not confuse this with “critical phases of flight,” such as takeoff and landing. Here, the phrase means important stages in the student’s training progress, not specific parts of one flight.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor reviewed the lesson plan carefully because the first solo is one of the most critical phases of flight training.
Example Sentence 2
Veteran instructors emphasize extra vigilance in critical phases of flight training to catch mistakes before they escalate.