Definition
A voluntary set of guiding principles, published by the Aviators Code Initiative, that defines the standards of conduct, responsibility, and airmanship expected of student pilots during flight training. It addresses areas such as general responsibilities, training and proficiency, security, environmental issues, use of technology, and advancement of general aviation.
Plain English
A written guide that tells student pilots what good behaviour, good habits, and good attitudes look like while they are learning to fly.
Context Anchor
Seen in instructor ethics and professionalism discussions, especially when an instructor is helping a student understand expected conduct during flight training.
Why Pilots Care
Adopting these standards early helps student pilots develop safe decision-making habits and reduces the chance of developing poor practices that could affect later training or licensing.
Intuition Check
Do not read “model” as an aircraft model or a required rulebook. Here, “model” means a good example to follow; the code is guidance, not a regulation by itself.
Example Sentence 1
During the first ground lesson, the instructor handed her a copy of the Student Pilot's Model Code of Conduct and walked through what each section meant in practice.
Example Sentence 2
Following the Student Pilot’s Model Code of Conduct helped the student remember to cancel a flight when fatigue was present instead of pushing to meet a schedule.