I'd like to see some easy to find (eg-
www.flysafely.com or some similarly easy to remember domain name)online safety training information, for members and non-members alike. Someone toss me a link to this if it already exists, so Ican start telling people about it, but a quick google for "AMAflight safety" didn't bring up anything that would be as clear, simple, and useful as what I imagine.
It wouldn't need to be more than a list of best practices (including, but not limited to the rules and regs already in place via the safety code) in a format that's more likely to get people to read through/view the whole thing than the .pdf files I see being passed around currently. Things that people might not be told by hobby shops, or might not read in the AMA's safety code or park flyer documents.
Prop safety (with pictures illustrating the dangers), proper construction tips to ensure continued safe performance of their aircraft (eg- how to keep your plane from turning into an ornithopter if it isn't intended to be one), information on things like what voltage in the receiver battery is considered "too low"to risk a flight, fuel choices and lifespans, best practices for engine break-in, maintenance and management, things to check on your plane before/after each flight/day/season, what it means to fly responsibly - even while flying aerobatically...Basically everything you could need to know for the basics of each fo the types of flight the AMAdeals with, all in one simple website that doesn't put it all in legalese. Stuff that parents who find their kids interested in say, R/C flight, can go to and learn how to do it safely - even if they aren't interested in doing it themselves. Stuff that new pilots of any age should know (bonus points for a separate set of information relating the same points for younger children to learn from, or materials the parents and kids could each benefit equally from - simpler terms, less photos of hands cut up from prop accidents, etc...).
You could also put together youtube "seminars" or tv-show style presentations including all of these sorts of things(for those people who pay better attention to TVthan they do to books).