Definition
Applying larger or more abrupt control inputs than the airplane requires for the desired result, causing the aircraft to respond more than intended and forcing the pilot to make corrective inputs in the opposite direction.
Plain English
Pushing, pulling, or moving the controls more than needed, so the airplane reacts too much and you end up chasing it back the other way.
Context Anchor
Seen in basic flight training when practicing straight-and-level flight, turns, approaches, landings, and other maneuvers that require smooth control.
Derivation
Built from 'over-' meaning too much, and 'controlling' meaning operating the flight controls. The word literally describes using the controls beyond what is needed.
Why Pilots Care
Overcontrolling increases pilot workload, creates instability, and can lead to loss of situational awareness or control.
Analogy
It is like steering a car with quick, big jerks of the wheel instead of small, smooth movements. The car weaves because each correction is more than the situation needs.
Intuition Check
Overcontrolling does not mean controlling the airplane carefully. It means using more control movement than the airplane needs for the correction.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor noted that the student was overcontrolling in the flare, causing the airplane to balloon and then drop onto the runway.
Example Sentence 2
In light turbulence the pilot avoided overcontrolling by making small, deliberate corrections to hold altitude.