G'day Folks
What an interesting read this has become, with lots of differing opions, what may be a way to help to cut the road toll and accident(crash) rate is to make it compulsory to undertake an advanced/defensive driving course/examination at the end of the 1st year of "P" plates, then if in the 2nd year there are no infringements/accidents then and only then, would a full license be isued, this would have to be Australia wide and start at the same time and for ALL newly issued "P" licenses regardless to age of driver or country of origin.
my 2nd 5cents worth, this could get expensive
cheers
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
Even if the parent (or whoever it may be) said nothing, its still steering wheel in hand, foot on the accelerator type of experience. I used my parent-instructed time to get used to handling a car, traffic, wet roads etc. My road rules knowlege and other important bits came from the paid instructor (as they should).
Unfortunatley, most learners can't afford 10 or more paid lessons (let alone 120 hours of paid lessons). Parents are not always willing to help out, as the "fend for youself, save up for lessons and your fisrt car" idea usually applies. So its a handfull of lessons and a test, fail once or twice from lack of experience, and you still get your licence in 2-3 months.
The guy i talked about earlier wrote off that first car after having his licence 2 days!!! Going sideways around a corner in the wet. Hit a bridge.
Advanced/defensive driving courses and formal training are popularly seen as a solution but unfortunately the research suggests that they don't help.
From this source:
http://www.qoh.com.au/pdfview/view/117
Despite decades of research indicating driver education does not reduce crash involvement among beginning drivers, it still has tremendous popular appeal as a means to improve driver safety.
And this:
When the young driver problem is addressed in public forums, there inevitably is an appeal for more or better driver education. Several comprehensive international reviews of the best scientific evaluations of driver education programs for young beginners all come to the same conclusion: There is no difference in the crash records of driver education graduates compared with equivalent groups of beginners who learned to drive without formal education..."
And from here:
APPENDIX M
Reviews of evaluation studies have found no evidence that either advanced or defensive driving courses reduce the accident involvement of those who attend.
Graduated licencing apparently shows more promising results.
Last edited by vnx205; 21st December 2007 at 02:17 PM. Reason: Non agreement of subject and verb after earlier edit.
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
All that data is very interesting, there is a school of thought (hypothesis if you like) that many graduates of "advanced driver training courses' are actually more dangerous because they have qualified as advanced drivers.
I wonder if the research has been done to determine whether the behaviours and attitudes of those who do these type or courses, before doing the course of are a sample from the same "population" or did they in-fact come from a different "population" of attitudes and behaviours?
Must see if I can find something on it!
Diana
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
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