I'm about value for you buck. For this amount of $, is this the best option, or are there others? Most AR owners in HI don't shoot theirs enough to justify something that's supposed to be "better" like a Noveske. It's the Indian, not the arrow.
I have a S&W MPII and it shoots better than the guys who are in my class with a Noveske or DD, etc...I do expect an instructor to have a "better" rifle. I mean if you had a guy teaching your class with an Anderson build, that would be concerning. Even if he can out perform you.
gUuUUd ENuFF
These are good points and people make the mistake of focusing too much on the rifle where they spend all their money on it, and have a nice safe queen or bargain in the classifieds. For people getting into firearms they should budget based on 3 things: firearm/accessories, practice, training. For a person with a $5,000 budget, which is a lot of money, $2500 might go into taking a few local classes and skill builders along with a class on the mainland. $1,000 for practice ammo. And that leaves $1,500 for the firearm & accessories. Then there's the matter of time that beginners don't account for, the hundreds of hours to become proficient.
Overall the firearm is a relatively minor item compared to everything else but is instead treated as the most important item.
As far as instructors equipment. It should simply do what is needed. If an instructor can shoot a 600 yard bullseye with a milspec AR15 with iron sights, that shows the students it's the person, not the gun. And that's an important lesson to learn.