Definition
A safety framework that trains pilots to identify threats (conditions outside the cockpit that increase risk, such as weather, traffic, or distractions), recognize errors (their own actions or inactions that deviate from intended outcomes), and apply countermeasures to keep the flight from progressing into an undesired aircraft state.
Plain English
A way of thinking that helps pilots spot trouble coming, catch their own mistakes, and fix things before they turn into something worse.
Context Anchor
Used in preflight planning, approach briefings, crew coordination, and instructor discussions about managing risk during a flight.
Derivation
The phrase combines three plain words. 'Threat' means something outside the pilot's control that could cause problems. 'Error' means a mistake the pilot makes. 'Management' means handling both of these on purpose, rather than just reacting to them. The model came out of airline safety research in the 1990s and is now standard across professional aviation.
Why Pilots Care
TEM directly reduces the chance of incidents by giving pilots a repeatable method to stay ahead of problems instead of reacting after they grow.
Analogy
TEM is like defensive driving in the air: you watch for conditions that could create trouble, notice your own mistakes quickly, and correct them before they lead to danger.
Grounding Statement
A pilot using TEM might notice lowering clouds, brief a backup plan, catch a navigation mistake early, and correct it before the flight becomes unsafe.
Intuition Check
Do not read “threat” as only an immediate emergency, and do not read “error” as only a major mistake. In TEM, a threat can be any condition that raises risk, and an error can be any pilot or crew action that needs to be caught and corrected.
Example Sentence 1
During the preflight briefing, the captain identified thunderstorms along the route as a threat and discussed how the crew would manage it using TEM principles.
Example Sentence 2
After a heading deviation, the first officer used TEM language to call out the error so the captain could correct it immediately.