Definition
A personality assessment tool that sorts individuals into one of sixteen types based on four pairs of opposing preferences: Extraversion vs. Introversion (where a person draws energy from), Sensing vs. Intuition (how a person takes in information), Thinking vs. Feeling (how a person makes decisions), and Judging vs. Perceiving (how a person organizes their outer life). The result is expressed as a four-letter code such as ISTJ or ENFP. In aviation instruction, it is used to help instructors recognize that students learn, communicate, and respond to feedback differently, and to adjust their teaching approach accordingly.
Plain English
A personality test that places people into one of sixteen types, each described by a four-letter code. Instructors use it as a reminder that students think and learn in different ways, so the same teaching style won't work equally well for everyone.
Context Anchor
Seen in the Aviation Instructor’s Handbook in discussions of human behavior, learning differences, and instructor-student communication.
Derivation
Named after the mother-daughter team Katharine Cook Briggs and Isabel Briggs Myers, who developed the indicator in the 1940s based on the personality theories of Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung. Knowing this helps explain why the tool exists in aviation training literature at all -- it is borrowed from general psychology, not built for aviation.
Why Pilots Care
Instructors who recognize personality preferences can adjust their teaching approach so students understand concepts more quickly and feel more supported during training.
Intuition Check
MBTI is not a pass-fail test and not a measure of pilot ability. It is only a tool for thinking about personal preferences and communication style.
Example Sentence 1
The flight instructor reviewed the MBTI material in the Aviation Instructor's Handbook to better understand why two of her students responded so differently to the same lesson.
Example Sentence 2
Knowing common MBTI patterns helped the chief instructor assign students to instructors whose communication style matched the student's preference for structure.