Definition
The duty of a flight instructor to help each student learn, meet the standards required for certification, and develop into a safe, competent pilot. This includes providing accurate instruction, evaluating progress honestly, ensuring the student is prepared before solo and checkride, and modeling the professional behavior, judgment, and airmanship expected of a certificated pilot.
Plain English
It is the instructor's job to actually teach the student well, judge their readiness fairly, and only sign them off when they are truly ready to fly safely on their own.
Context Anchor
Seen in instructor training and human behavior discussions, especially when describing how an instructor should respond to a student's learning needs, emotions, mistakes, and safety decisions.
Derivation
Responsibility comes from a Latin idea meaning “to answer for” or “to respond.” That fits the aviation meaning: a flight instructor must respond to the student's needs and is answerable for the quality and safety of the training they provide.
Why Pilots Care
How well an instructor meets this responsibility determines whether students stay in training, develop sound judgment, and ultimately fly safely on their own.
Intuition Check
Do not read responsibility here as only “being in charge.” In this context it means actively helping the student learn, stay safe, correct mistakes, and develop good pilot judgment.
Example Sentence 1
Recognizing that the student was rushing checklists, the CFI took her flight instructor's responsibility seriously and delayed the solo endorsement until the habit was corrected.
Example Sentence 2
Recognizing that a student is distracted by outside stress is part of the flight instructor's responsibility during a lesson.