Definition
A set of practices that guide an instructor in applying a written lesson plan during actual instruction. The instructor reviews the plan before the lesson, follows it as a working guide rather than a script, adapts it to the individual student's progress and needs, and uses it to keep the lesson focused on its stated objective and completion standards.
Plain English
It means using the written plan as a flexible roadmap for teaching — knowing it well enough to follow it without reading from it, adjusting it to fit the student in front of you, and making sure the lesson actually achieves what the plan said it would.
Context Anchor
Seen in instructor training, flight instructor preparation, ground lessons, preflight briefings, flight lessons, and postflight reviews.
Derivation
Lesson comes from an older word meaning something read or learned. Plan comes from a word meaning a drawing or layout. Together, a lesson plan is a laid-out path for helping someone learn a specific thing.
Why Pilots Care
A lesson plan that is written but not used properly produces unfocused instruction, missed objectives, and inconsistent student progress. Using the plan well keeps each lesson purposeful and measurable, which is the difference between training that builds competence and training that just fills time.
Intuition Check
Do not assume “properly” means reading the lesson plan word-for-word. In this context, it means using the plan as a guide while still adjusting to the student and the actual training situation.
Example Sentence 1
Before the flight, the instructor reviewed the lesson plan and identified the two maneuvers the student needed to perform to completion standards.
Example Sentence 2
Before the lesson the CFI reviewed how to use the lesson plan properly so every required maneuver would be introduced in logical order.