Definition
A training approach in which the instructor uses realistic flight situations, rather than isolated maneuvers, as the framework for learning. The student is placed in a meaningful operational context — a planned cross-country, a diversion, a system failure, a weather decision — and must apply knowledge, judgment, and skill to manage the situation. The instructor's role is to facilitate decision-making rather than dictate correct answers.
Plain English
A way of teaching flying where the instructor sets up real-world flight situations and lets the student work through them, instead of just drilling individual skills one at a time.
Context Anchor
Seen in flight lessons, simulator sessions, preflight briefings, and instructor lesson plans where a training event is built around a realistic flight situation.
Derivation
From 'scenario,' originally an Italian theatrical term meaning the outline of a play's scenes. In training, it means a structured situation the student steps into and works through — the lesson is built around the situation, not around isolated drills.
Why Pilots Care
It builds practical judgment that reduces errors when pilots encounter unexpected situations in real flight.
Intuition Check
Do not read this as simply “telling a flying story.” In this FAA training context, the scenario is the structure of the lesson: it gives the student a realistic situation to manage and decisions to make.
Example Sentence 1
The CFI used the scenario-based training method by giving the student a planned flight to a nearby airport and then introducing a deteriorating weather report en route, requiring the student to decide whether to continue, divert, or return.
Example Sentence 2
By applying the scenario-based training method, the student learned to prioritize tasks during an unexpected weather change.