Definition
The set of internal influences that shape how a learner takes in, interprets, and assigns meaning to information during instruction. The Aviation Instructor's Handbook identifies six primary factors: physical organism, basic need, goals and values, self-concept, time and opportunity, and element of threat. Each one filters or distorts what the student actually perceives, regardless of what the instructor presents.
Plain English
These are the things going on inside a student that change what they see, hear, and understand during a lesson. Two students can sit through the same briefing and walk away with completely different ideas of what was taught, because their bodies, needs, beliefs, confidence, available time, and stress levels are all different.
Context Anchor
Seen in aviation instructor training when explaining why a student may miss, misread, or misunderstand something during a lesson.
Derivation
Factor comes from a Latin word meaning “maker” or “doer,” and perception comes from a Latin word meaning “to take in” or “to understand.” Together, the phrase points to the things that help make a person’s understanding of a situation turn out one way instead of another.
Why Pilots Care
Recognizing these factors allows instructors to adjust teaching so students absorb critical safety information more reliably and progress faster.
Analogy
Perception is like looking through a windshield. If the windshield is clear, you see the outside world more accurately; if it is dirty, tinted, or fogged, the same scene can look different.
Grounding Statement
A student on final approach who is tense and overloaded may look at the runway but still fail to notice an important cue the instructor sees clearly.
Intuition Check
Do not assume perception means only eyesight. In this FAA instruction context, perception means the whole process of noticing something, giving it meaning, and understanding what it means for the task at hand.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor reviewed the factors that affect perception before deciding the student's slow progress was due to fatigue and stress, not lack of ability.
Example Sentence 2
High workload in the traffic pattern can intensify factors that affect perception and reduce a student's ability to interpret instrument indications accurately.