Definition
Two complementary instructor tools used to evaluate student performance and reinforce learning. A critique is the instructor's review of a student's performance — typically following a flight, lesson, or exercise — that identifies strengths, weaknesses, and areas for improvement. An oral assessment is the use of spoken questions and discussion to measure a student's knowledge, understanding, and ability to apply that knowledge in aviation situations.
Plain English
These are the two main ways an instructor checks how well a student is doing: by reviewing their performance afterward (the critique) and by asking them questions out loud to see what they know and how they think (the oral assessment).
Context Anchor
Seen in flight instructor training, lesson debriefs, ground lessons, and any situation where an instructor checks a learner’s understanding by discussion rather than by a written test.
Derivation
‘Critique’ comes from the Greek kritikē, meaning ‘the art of judging.’ It is not the same as ‘criticism’ in the negative sense — a critique is a balanced review. ‘Oral’ comes from the Latin os, oris, meaning ‘mouth,’ so an oral assessment is simply an evaluation done through spoken conversation rather than in writing.
Why Pilots Care
Effective critiques and assessments accelerate learning and reduce the risk of repeated errors or knowledge gaps that could affect safety.
Intuition Check
Do not read critique as simply negative criticism. In this context, a critique is useful feedback, including what was done well and what needs improvement. Do not read oral assessment as casual talking. It is a purposeful spoken check of understanding.
Example Sentence 1
After the training flight, the instructor delivered a critique covering the student's pattern work, radio calls, and crosswind landing technique.
Example Sentence 2
Oral assessments during ground school ensure the student can explain aircraft systems before moving to the next chapter.