I've noticed an increase in the number of controllers telling pilots to "squawk mode c" while on the ground. While this would be correct at airports that have ground radar, I continue to hear this at airports that are without such equipment. This shows that the controller does not understand why we have pilots squawk mode c on the ground in specific situations.
Many large airports have ground radar which allows the controllers to monitor aircraft and vehicle movements on the taxiways and runways. A quick glance at the airport diagram is the easiest way to know if your airport is equipped. For example, DFW's diagram says, "ASDE-X in use. Operate transponders with altitude reporting mode and ADS-B (if equipped) enabled on all airport surfaces." A similar statement is also provided in the ATIS. Controllers at an airport like OKC wouldn't care, or even know, what mode the transponder was in because they are looking outside, not at a ground radar display.
I'm sure some of you have already copied the VATSIM CoC line that says pilots shouldn't squawk standby on the network. While this is true, it isn't the controllers job to enforce CoC. Changing the little dot to an asterisk on VRC isn't going to change the way you control at these airports anyway.
Why am I complaining about something that doesn't really matter in the long run? I just want to make sure the students are being taught properly. Telling a student to do something with out explanation isn't adequate instruction. They should understand why planes on the ground at DFW need to enable altitude reporting, while planes can have it on whatever mode they want at OKC.
Hopefully some of you will agree with me and we can do a better job of instructing students in the future.