
Originally Posted by
vnx205
I wonder how much of the attitude that some new drivers have now is because there is now so much emphasis in marketing and in car reviews of how safe modern cars are and how well they go, handle and stop.
Some of us spent a lot of our early years driving cars that we knew had limitations. We knew, for example, that unless we changed back to second going down the Dorrigo Mountain, that our FJ Holden would run out of brakes long before we reached the bottom. Some people seem to believe that modern cars have no limitations. They think that ABS will stop them no matter how short the distance and the ESC will get them around the corner no matter how fast they enter. They also seem to think that the secondary safety features will always save them. Some of them seem to forget that the laws of physics still apply, no matter how many electronic aids the car has or how much hype there was in its marketing.
In spite of the importance of improving driving, I don't believe driver training should be part of the school curriculum. There isn't room for anything more in the school curriculum because of the extra things society has expected to add in the last half century or so. It is a bit unreasonable for society and the media to attack schools because of falling standards in the 3Rs and then in the next breath ask them to also teach students about politics, sex, anger management, budgeting, decision making, ethics and advanced driving techniques.
There is another reason I don't think schools should try to teach driver training, even if they could find room in their already crowded curriculum. I am convinced that more accidents, injuries and deaths are the result of the driver's attitude, not his or her ability. Driver education might be appropriate in schools. Driver training isn't.
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