As a mathematics student, Cavagnaro loved to watch airplanes while doing her homework, and dreamed of flying but was unable to afford the lessons. She finally took up flying in 1999, while on a
sabbatical after earning
tenure at Sewanee; her initial lessons were a tenth-anniversary gift from her husband. She became a certified flight instructor in 2001, and became specialized in flight aerobatics after training with "spin doctor" William K. Kershner. Cavagnaro's planes have included a
Cessna 152 Aerobat, a
Beechcraft Bonanza, and a
Piper Cherokee 140. Kershner held the record for consecutive turns in a
flat spin in an aircraft, with 25 turns; Cavagnaro broke it by performing 60 consecutive turns in her Cessna, and filmed the results to document the fact that the spin recovery technique does not change after larger numbers of turns. Subsequently,
Spencer Suderman performed even more consecutive turns, with 81 in 2014 and 98 in 2016. From 2004 to 2008 she was a visiting professor of aviation systems at the
University of Tennessee Space Institute, working as a test pilot to study the stability under icing of a
de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter owned by
NASA. She runs the Ace Aerobatic School in
Sewanee, Tennessee, is a regular columnist for the
Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, and is a designated examiner for the
Federal Aviation Administration. Cavagnaro was a 2005 winner of the Amelia Earhart Memorial Scholarship Awards of the
Ninety-Nines. In the
General Aviation Awards Program, Cavagnaro was named the 2018 National FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year, and 2020 National Certificated Flight Instructor of the Year. She was named to the Tennessee Aviation Hall of Fame in 2018. Her biography was one of nine stories of women aviators included in the 2008 book
A Hunger for the Sky by Sparky Barnes. ==References==