Definition
Control inputs made by the pilot to adjust the airplane's track over the ground or its path through the air so that it matches the intended path. In ground track work, these corrections compensate for the effect of wind drift to keep the airplane following a planned line over the ground.
Plain English
Small adjustments the pilot makes with the controls to put the airplane back on the path they meant to fly.
Context Anchor
Seen when learning drift and ground track control, especially while using outside visual references to keep the airplane following a planned line over the ground.
Derivation
“Correction” comes from a Latin idea meaning “to make straight” or “set right.” That fits the aviation use: the pilot notices the airplane is no longer tracking the desired line and makes an adjustment to set the path right again.
Why Pilots Care
Prevents unintended deviation from the intended route, conserving fuel and maintaining situational awareness.
Grounding Statement
If the wind pushes the airplane left of the intended line, a flightpath correction is the pilot’s adjustment to stop that drift and return to the line.
Intuition Check
Do not think of flightpath corrections as only big turns or major fixes. In this context, they are often small, timely adjustments made before the airplane gets far off the intended path.
Example Sentence 1
As the crosswind picked up on the downwind leg, the student made small flightpath corrections to keep the ground track parallel to the runway.
Example Sentence 2
After the wind shifted, the pilot made continuous flightpath corrections to stay on the sectional's planned course.