I used to instruct in the F-4. One of the "new fangled" gadgets the pilots from UPT (undergraduate pilot training - USAF) had to get used to compared to the T-38 was the "tone."
The T-38 had a simple AOA device for the final turn out of the overhead, or on a straight-in final: a green (if I remember right) circle in the middle, and two red arrows pointing to it, one above pointing down, and the other below pointing up. If you had the lower arrow pointing up lit, you weren't max performing the jet, if the circle was lit, you were right on, but if the upper arrow was lit, you were pulling too hard and were in danger of stalling. The USAF had lost quite a few T-38's and pilots, both students and IP's, from stalled aircraft in the final turn, and this device was put in to assist in understanding how the aircraft was performing. Now for the rest of the story:
Coming into the F-4 from the T-38 was like going from a 70's MGB to a Chrysler Imperial (of the same era) with power steering, power brakes, push button automatic, automatic headlight dimmers and an assorted number of extra gadgets and systems designed to make the only airplane in Air Force inventory that wasn't designed to fly easier for the pilot to operate. One of those gadgets was an aural tone for being "on speed."
"On speed" meant that you were established in the correct AOA for maximum lift of the wing. The early hard wing (blown too with BLC - boundary layer control, hot bleed air off the compressor section [that led to some great airplane fires because there was about 2000 pounds of fuel in each wing] which was deactivated later on) was set at 19.2 units. Don't ask me what a unit was, this is a McDonald Douglas product and their engineering is kind of quirky. Later on, the Air Force put F-106 equalizers on, the slats, and the AOA curve for maneuvering was adjusted upwards and "on speed" became 25 units for air-to-air, but the engineers kept the same attitude for landing so you wouldn't scrape the tail at 19.2 so with the gear down, the tone switched back to the hard wing scale.
If you think this is all confusing, that's how it was to anyone coming out of UPT and Fighter Lead-in too. The tone would come on at 15 with a slow beep. At 17 units it would beep faster and raise a notch in tone. At 19.2 it was steady and a note higher. At 21 it make a ringing tone at a higher pitch and at 22.3 it would reach its highest frequency of rinnging and set off the "foot shaker" - the left rudder pedal would vibrate. (If you think this is a stupid way to build a jet, you're right in some ways, but then again, this was the last jet designed with a slide rule and a drafting board out of the 50's.) (The Russians were a little less forgiving to the pilot, they had a "knuckle rapper" on the stick of their MiG-23.)
Well anyway, this led to a lot of people "landing short" in actual IMC weather conditions. They'd pull the power back on the straight in PAR, ILS or Tacan get the tone and follow the tone right into the ground and make another smoking hole. So I'd take the kid out as part of the syllabus on the Transition rides (where it was just one jet for aircraft handling characteristics) and have the guy configure at altitude and establish a 700 fpm descent on speed. Then I'd tell him to pull the power to idle and maintain on speed. The VVI would be somewhere around 3500 down. Then I would tell him to push the power up to MIL (100% no afterburner) and hold on speed, and the jet would climb at 3500 fpm or something like that all while maintaining the tone.
This would impress them that holding "on speed" was no magical cure-all, especially in the weather for instrument approaches. The simple rule on final was your speed was 155 plus your gas. You established this and would get a tone, and then adjust your glide path control with power. Of course you can "pitch" the airplane in the direction you want to go, but if you don't do the power, you're not going to be "on speed." I would do both to ease the process and still do today when flying an ILS (110.3 and 174 on the inbound to 17C at DFW) in the Super-duper 80.
When I took my son out for his first airplane ride in a C-152, we got established in the working area, I set the RPM at 2300 and told him to hold 90 knots. Then I chopped the power and told him to maintain 90 knots, and we pointed down at a good clip. Then I pushed it all the way in and we held 90 knots and we started to climb. I then repeated this exercise with him holding the aircraft wings level at 60 knots. I then set one power setting and told him to go for different airspeeds. Eventually, each one would establish some sort of equilibrium (although not necessarily level). My son got the picture; you power up and down and hold your airspeed with pitch. He looked over my shoulder just now as I was typing this out. I explained to him what I was doing and he said the amazing part was that he understands it.
Now if you're going along level and you want to speed up and maintain level flight you're going to push it up to go faster. But in order to maintain level flight, you have to "plane" out the aircraft to maintain level flight. Once you reach a new equilibrium between thrust and drag, everything will be in balance again, but your trim will be farther forward. The old 727 would actually get to zero pitch (nose in the hole) around .84 mach.
Of course, you can always trade airspeed for altitude and visa versa. This is one of the beautiful lessons of aviation that nothing is free, but you can make "economic" choices.
But I think a basic understanding of power for altitude and pitch for airspeed will help the pilot out in a situation where he is below on his glide slope in the weather so his first reaction is to add some power as he pitches up a little, reacquires his desired slope, notches back the power to something a little more than he had before as he pitches over to keep the GS centered.
And if I'm fast on the glide slope (as I usually am) I'll notch the throttles back and have to increase my pitch to maintain the slope and catch the airspeed with power again on the backside, but I'm changing an equilibrium here like with pushing it up with level flight. The two are interrelated.
But if you only understand power for airspeed, you're just driving a bus and not flying an airplane.
That’s my 2 cents with a buck twenty-five thrown in for extra measure.