Definition
The four categories a pilot must evaluate when making aeronautical decisions: the Pilot, the Aircraft, the Environment, and the type of Operation (the flight itself). Together these form the framework a pilot uses to assess overall risk before and during a flight.
Plain English
The four things you check before flying to decide whether the flight is safe: yourself, the airplane, the conditions outside, and the kind of flight you're planning to make.
Context Anchor
Seen in ADM lessons, preflight planning, scenario-based training, and flight reviews when discussing what could make a flight unsafe.
Derivation
Risk means exposure to possible loss or harm. Element means one basic part of something larger. ADM means aeronautical decision-making, so the phrase points to the basic parts of a flight that can create risk and need a pilot’s judgment.
Why Pilots Care
Systematically checking these four elements helps a pilot spot and reduce risks early, lowering the chance of an accident caused by poor decisions.
Grounding Statement
A safe-looking flight can become unsafe if one part of the situation changes, such as the pilot being tired, the aircraft having a problem, the weather getting worse, or pressure building to arrive on time.
Intuition Check
Do not read “risk” here as only danger that is already happening. In ADM, risk means anything in the flight situation that could increase the chance of an unsafe outcome.
Example Sentence 1
During her preflight planning, she walked through each of the four risk elements in ADM: her own readiness, the aircraft's status, the weather and terrain, and the demands of the flight.
Example Sentence 2
The student pilot learned to weigh each risk element in ADM when choosing whether to accept a cross-country flight.