Well, yes, but......
I too wonder at how few youngsters are interested in flying. That said, at the school, we used to host a busload of young kids, ages 6 through 12 at the airport each summer from a reservation school east of us. We'd set up our sim and several laptops with MS Flight on them, roll out a couple airplanes and open the maintenance hangar for tours.
Most of those kids were not the least interested in aviation or airplanes.....a larger percentage were kind of interested in "playing" with the simulators.
But, every time we had one of these groups (and they all were 50 to 60 kids), there was always one, and sometimes two who simply weren't going to leave till they had all their questions answered....."how do I get started?", "how much does it cost", "what kind of jobs are there", etc.
And, in my experience, this may be similar to the ratio of youngsters who have the potential to become interested in flying.
Prior to one of those visits, I went into the pilot lounge, where there were a couple of corporate crews using the wi fi, and a couple of the local sprayers and an instructor or two. I warned them all that they were about to be invaded by a herd of kids. When I mentioned the ages of these kids, one of the corporate pilots (King Air 200) said to me "Why are you bothering with kids that are six or seven years old? They're way too young to have a clue about what they want to do for a living."
I thought about that a moment, and responded that I had first got interested in flying as a flagger on the family farm, flagging for the Stearman sprayers.....and getting sprayed with DDT, or whatever else they were spreading. I was seven. I then went around the room and asked each of the pilots there at what age they first got interested in flying.....not when they decided they would fly for a living....but what sparked that interest? Every one of them, including the King Air pilot, allowed as how that happened at between ages of 6 and 9.
I think that's part of the issue we see in Young Eagles and other groups: Many of those 12 and 14 year olds have already been exposed to LOTS of other interesting things, they've been involved in sports and other activities, and have REALLY got into electronics, as in X-Box. The six year olds....not so much just yet. They're perhaps a bit more open to new stimuli at that age.
So, I recommend working on them when they're young.....like six or seven.
But, also understand that if you hook one out of sixty or seventy, you're probably doing really well. And, I guess that's okay. We simply have to keep trying.
MTV