Cockpit Discipline
I would like to write today something very
interesting to all Pilots. In the past decade, the discipline of Human Factors
has become involved in determining the causes of Aircraft Accidents.
But what that mean discipline to you? Discipline
in the workplace is the means by which supervisory personnel correct behavioral
deficiencies and guarantee adherence to established company rules.
The purpose of discipline is correct behavior.
It is not designed to correct or embarrass any Pilot inside the Cockpit. But
why discipline? As Pilots and Air Traffic Controllers we have the tools to
prevent accidents:
The Experience, Skill, knowledge, Training etc.,
so what? Part of the answer is that many pilots and also air traffic controllers
have a misconception or lack of understanding about what can affect human performance
to the point of disaster.
So, our minds consist of five main cognitive
functions: Memory, Attention, Language, Visual-Spatial Skills, and Executive
Function.
At all times is very important to challenge, stimulate
and effective exercise all five areas to stay mentally sharp as Pilots, specifically
a good discipline inside the Cockpit.
Remember memory plays a crucial role in all
cognitive activities, including when you are reading the checklist, reasoning,
and do some mental calculations when flying.
In a book I read few years ago, I remembered that
NASA was studied and has shown a dramatic increase in airline accidents caused
by procedural deviation in the cockpit. They are trying to explain in the
reports and researchers why accidents happened, between 1977 and 1984, specifically
in the course of these years. But anyway accidents continued to occur if you as
a Pilot don’t pay close attention to the discipline inside your cockpit when
you are flying your airplane.
So, during NASA research, 33 % of those
accidents were caused by a Pilot Deviation from basic operational procedures,
making this the leading Crew to induce the error.
The remaining top three factors included
inadequate cross- check by second crew member, pilots not conditioned for
proper response during abnormal condition, and pilot did not recognize need for
Go – around.
A comparable study of Part 121 in the United
States was conducted in 1991 that illustrated a significant rise from the
previous statistics. But anyway the lack of Cockpit Procedural behavior accounted
for 69 % of Pilots Errors, more than three times that of the second ranking
category of poor decision making.
But all these investigations continued in the
following years so far, the connection between flight safety and procedural
conduct in the cockpit. All Pilots need to know and focus the most important
areas of concentration: a good company philosophy included in your SMS manual,
policies, procedures, and practices. Each point I mentioned here considered a
good link to sound Cockpit Discipline.
Flying SOP (Standard Operating Procedure) is
the best tool to set of guidelines that serve to provide a common ground for
Pilots who are usually unfamiliar with each other’s experience when flying.
So, as airline mergers today all around the world
and acquisitions continue to be the basis of the industry, standardization becomes
increasingly more important for flight safety all the time.
As a result of those changes, pilots from
diverse employment backgrounds and experience to various good philosophies must
always have a good discipline all the time inside the cockpit.
This is perhaps the most important part of the
discipline process to stay away from accidents.
Pilots sometimes deviate from an SOP due to one
of several reasons comparable: Individualism, Complacency, Laziness, or Frustration.
So, safety issues and procedures change over
the years, and also there have been numerous factors that have caused airlines
to develop new cockpit procedures, some of them established in your SMS.
Also the introduction of the TCAS (Traffic
Alert and Collision Avoidance System, into the cockpit few years ago required a
new set of procedures to be created, besides
the Sterile Cockpit Rule and FAA regulation requiring pilots to refrain from
non-essential activities during critical phases of flight, these procedures are
established as a good discipline in the cockpit .
Always remember lessons learned and practical
applications and a good communication is the key to avoid future incidents or
accidents, take your responsibilities seriously maintaining a good discipline all
the time not only in your cockpit in all, always practice effective CRM and
maintain a good Situational Awareness all the time. Be decisive of the delegations
of responsibilities; don’t complete nonessential tasks during critical phases
of flight, maintain vigilance at all times, Fly Safely!!!
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