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Human Performance In Aviation Maintenance Workshop

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Presentation on theme: "Human Performance In Aviation Maintenance Workshop"— Presentation transcript:

1 Human Performance In Aviation Maintenance Workshop

2 Please state your: INTRODUCTION Name Company Position
Number of years in aviation

3 WORKING AGREEMENT Facilitators agree to: Act as facilitators
Provide structure Direct activities Answer questions Confront issues

4 WORKING AGREEMENT You agree to: Actively participate Share experiences
Be open Feel free to disagree Sit back and enjoy yourself

5 Are you human? Do humans make mistakes? Rate yourself on a scale of 1 to 10 on the following questions (10 is most willing) How willing are you to learn how to reduce the possibility of making a mistake? How willing are you to change?

6 Workshop Objective To raise awareness of human error and develop ways to prevent or reduce the occurrence and consequences of human error in aviation

7 What You Will Leave With
An awareness of the human aspect of aircraft maintenance. An awareness of how your performance can affect the entire system. Tools to prevent maintenance errors— safety nets.

8

9 What do you need? Safety Net

10 A SAFETY NET

11 CHAIN OF EVENTS

12 Aviation Accidents 100 90 80 70 60 % 50 40 30 20 10 1903 Present Day
Human Error 70 60 % 50 40 30 20 10 Machine Error 1903 Present Day

13 HPIAM History

14

15

16 * Run Dryden Video

17 Industry estimates vary between
Maintenance errors contribute to what percentage of aircraft accidents/incidents? Industry estimates vary between 6% and 25%

18 The Heinrich Ratio Fatal accident Accidents Reportable incidents
1 Accidents 10 Reportable incidents 30 Incidents 600

19 “[Maintenance] error is not the cause of an accident.
The cause is to be found in whatever it was that interfered with the [Aviation Maintenance Specialist’s performance] at a critical moment, the outcome of which was a [maintenance] error.” Jerome Lederer, President Emeritus, Flight Safety Foundation

20 What are the benefits of Human Performance Training ?
At one major airline, after twelve months of training the following was found : Ground damage repair costs decreased 68% Maintenance related ground damage decreased 34% Occupational injury hours decreased 27% Occupational injury medical payout decreased 12% Ref: : Airline Maintenance Resource Management J.C. Taylor & T.D. Christensen

21 WORKSHOP OUTLINE Day 1 Introduction History Human Error
Intro. to the “Dirty Dozen” Survival exercise Teamwork Communication Shift Change Exercise Assertiveness Case study: McDonald Douglas 369

22 Case study: Human Factors In Aircraft Maintenance
WORKSHOP OUTLINE Day 2 Fatigue Stress Distraction Case study: Human Factors In Aircraft Maintenance Lack of Awareness Lack of Knowledge Lack of Resources Case study : Fokker F-28 Pressure Norms Complacency Case study: Boeing 737 Conclusion

23 RUN THE VIDEO THE HUMAN FACTORS IN AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE
MODULE 1 RUN THE VIDEO THE HUMAN FACTORS IN AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE

24 Human Error We all commit errors
Any time an action does not produce the desired result Something we do Something we fail to do THINGS THAT INTERFERE WITH OUR PERFORMANCE

25 Performance Different tasks; different approach
Two different types performance: a) Conscious b) Automatic

26 Automatic Performance
Develops only with practice Very fast Can do several things at once Repetitive Little conscious attention Skill-Based

27 Conscious Performance
Two different kinds: a) Rule- Based b) Knowledge-Based

28 Rule -Based Slower Sequential
Can only actually think about one thing at a time Requires effort

29 Knowledge-Based Not familiar with the situation
Not sure how to deal with it Use all the resources available to solve the problem Trial and Error/Success

30

31 Types of Errors 1. Execution Errors Forget lockwire
Using the wrong procedure 2. Planning Errors Change the wrong component Violation

32 Error There is often only one way to get it right, but lots of ways to mess up Terrible Odds exercise

33 Common Errors* Omission—forget a step, a part, etc. 56%
Incorrect installation 30% Wrong part 8% Other (ground handling, etc.) 6% * Ref.: ICAO Human Factors Circular 12 - Human Factors in Aircraft Maintenance Digest

34 The Dirty Dozen Introduction

35 1. Lack of Communication 2. Complacency 3. Lack of Knowledge 4. Distraction 5. Lack of Teamwork 6. Fatigue 7. Lack of Resources 8. Pressure 9. Lack of Assertiveness 10. Stress 11. Lack of Awareness 12. Norms

36 VIDEO

37 Survival Exercise

38 Beware of any gathering that includes name tags and “Facilitators”

39 Lost on the Pacific Coast

40

41

42 Fill out questionnaire and submit to facilitators.
Survey Fill out questionnaire and submit to facilitators.

43

44 TEAMWORK

45 What Makes A Good Team?

46 Name Some Teams Where You Work
Teams within teams

47 Five Strategies to Maintain an Effective Team
Maintain a clear mission Maintain team expectations Communicate with all team members Maintain trust Pitch in

48 COMMUNICATION (LACK OF)

49 and interpret messages.
What is Communication ? The dynamic process by which we engage and interpret messages.

50 Methods Of Communication
What you say What experts say ? Verbal 7% Tone of Voice ? 38% ? 55% Body Language 100% 100% Ref.: Albert Mehrabian

51 The Secret To Good Communication
2 EARS 2 EYES 1 MOUTH Use them in that order and proportion.

52 COMMUNICATION MODEL 30 A + B + C = What's said
Filters Filters A + B + C = What's said A + C = What's said that is subject to interpretation B = What's understood B = About % efficiency 30

53 Filters or Barriers to Communication
Prejudice Noise/lighting Distraction Culture Language Any others?

54 AN EXERCISE FOR THE MIND

55 Verbal vs Body Language

56 To Improve Communication
LEARN TO LISTEN Don’t debate Don’t detour Don’t pre-plan Don’t tune out

57 To Improve Communication
Ask questions Paraphrase Make eye contact Use positive body language Watch for filters: theirs and yours

58 Written Communication
“a sharing of thoughts”

59 Shift Change Exercise

60

61 Consider Your Audience
? Knowledge? Values? Experience? Language skills? Expectations? Attitude? Perception? Culture? ?

62 ASSERTIVENESS Ability to express your feelings, opinions, beliefs and needs Expressing yourself in a positive, productive manner

63 Assertion basically involves:
asking for what you need saying no when necessary

64 Assertiveness Works Both Ways
Assertive behaviour involves being able to receive requests or refusals with respect for others.

65 Aggressive Assertive Passive
ASSERTIVENESS Aggressive Assertive Passive

66 Assertiveness–How to Know what you want to say
Take the time you need to plan what you need to say Stick to the issue at hand Deal with the facts Support what you say with how you say it

67 Assertiveness Why Does It Matter?

68 Awareness Knowledge Pressure Fatigue Resources ASSERTIVENESS Norms Teamwork Stress Communication Complacency Distraction

69 Survival Exercise Results

70 Personal Safety Nets Lack of Teamwork Lack of Communication
Lack of Assertiveness (as per posters)

71 Case Study MacDonald Douglas 369

72 Small details… large results

73

74 Tennis Ball container supporting by-pass door open
AIR BYPASS DOOR AIR BYPASS DOOR Tennis Ball container supporting by-pass door open

75 Presumed location of container after inspection

76 Engine Inlet

77 50% air flow restriction

78 Damaged rotor blade and skid gear


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