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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:RCED-98-7</classification>
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 <subject>Airline industry</subject>
 <subject>Commercial aviation</subject>
 <subject>Safety regulation</subject>
 <subject>Human resources training</subject>
 <subject>Aircraft pilots</subject>
 <subject>Transportation safety</subject>
 <subject>Aircraft accidents</subject>
 <subject>Personnel management</subject>
 <subject>Flight crews</subject>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Human Factors: FAA&apos;s Guidance and Oversight of Pilot Crew Resource Management Training Can Be Improved</title>
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<abstract>Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO examined the role of airline
pilots&apos; performance in accidents and the Federal Aviation
Administration&apos;s (FAA) efforts to address any inadequate performance,
focusing on the: (1) types and frequency of accidents in which an
airline pilot&apos;s performance was cited as a contributing factor,
including those in which failure to use crew resource management (CRM)
principles was identified; and (2) adequacy of FAA&apos;s guidance for and
oversight of the airlines&apos; implementation of pilots&apos; training for CRM.&lt;p/&gt;GAO noted that: (1) of the 169 accidents that involved the major
airlines and that were investigated and reported on in detail by the
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) from 1983 through 1995,
about 30 percent were caused in part by the pilots&apos; performance; (2) in
at least one-third of these accidents, GAO determined that the pilots
did not correctly use CRM principles; (3) for example, according to
NTSB, just before the 1994 crash in Charlotte, North Carolina, which
killed 37 people, the aircraft had encountered a sudden change in wind
direction and the captain gave an incorrect order to the first officer,
who did not question the order, as CRM principles would require; (4)
during the same period, of the nearly 4,000 incidents, GAO found that
about one-fifth were caused in part by the pilots&apos; performance; (5)
FAA&apos;s guidance for and oversight of training in CRM does not ensure the
adequacy of this training under part 121 of the federal aviation
regulations, while they do under the new Advanced Qualification Program
(AQP); (6) FAA&apos;s guidance for the implementation of AQP specifies a
process for curriculum development that the airlines must follow in
order to integrate CRM training with technical flying skills; (7) FAA
inspectors overseeing this training assess the curriculum to see if
FAA&apos;s process has been followed, enabling them to determine whether the
pilots&apos; training under this curriculum is adequate; (8) although FAA
requires airlines to teach CRM in their traditional part 121 training,
the guidance it provides on how to develop the curriculum for this
training is ambiguous and does not provide standards that inspectors can
use to evaluate airlines&apos; CRM training; (9) because AQP training
generally differs from traditional part 121 training in how it develops
a curriculum for training CRM, the guidance for this training in AQP may
not be applicable to CRM training under part 121; (10) FAA needs to
develop guidance for teaching CRM under traditional part 121 training;
(11) and although 8 of the 10 major airlines plan to train all their
pilots under AQP, the need for guidance on CRM training under part 121
remains--both for those airlines that have opted not to enter AQP as
well as for those that participate in the program but will nonetheless
continue to have some of their pilots trained under part 121 for up to 8
years as they make the transition to AQP.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO/RCED-98-7</identifier>
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<note>Letter Report</note>
<extension>
 <searchTitle>GAO/RCED-98-7; Human Factors: FAA&apos;s Guidance and Oversight of Pilot Crew Resource Management Training Can Be Improved;
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<subject>
 <topic>Airline industry</topic>
 <topic>Commercial aviation</topic>
 <topic>Safety regulation</topic>
 <topic>Human resources training</topic>
 <topic>Aircraft pilots</topic>
 <topic>Transportation safety</topic>
 <topic>Aircraft accidents</topic>
 <topic>Personnel management</topic>
 <topic>Flight crews</topic>
 <topic>FAA Advanced Qualification Program</topic>
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