The local junior high lets out at 2:30 on Wednesdays, so they have after-school activities for the kids. I volunteered (actually initiated - it took some time to convince them) to teach model airplane building. Here is what we build consecutively: a Delta-Dart from the kit, a scratch-built Delta Dart, a Z-15, a Yard Ranger, and a No-Cal (one of Paul Bradley's plans they are a free download, plus they have down-loadable "skins"). By the way, No-Cal stands for "no calories" - essentially the FF equivalent to a CL profile.
Each plane is progressively harder to build. Once they complete the No-Cal, I'll have them build one more No-Cal and then a full fuselage plane (either a Dime Scale or a Bostonian). After that, they should have the skills to build most anything (a Ringmaster?)
CL Stunt is still #1 for me. So, why did I get into free-flight building? I wanted to learn to build lighter and building lighter is a discipline, not just ordering 6# balsa.
If you build CL, you can build FF. And if you normally build your stuntships straight, you can build good flying FF. And building FF does improve your building skills. So, if you want to support Bob Hunt in "Reach One - Teach One" start at the beginning and teach some Junior High kids. Just remember to pre-shrink your tissue for the simple stick models and don't get discouraged when you find lack of skill, short attention span, and inconstancy of interest. That is what you are trying to remedy! You're the doctor and the best equipped to help.
So, get going!
Scott