Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Learning to drive a car for the first time in the us


learning to drive a car for the first time in the us.  Drivers education should be something you enjoy doing with your teen. Learning to drive a car with your parent is the best kind of drivers ed. No parent wants their teen to wreck the car.

That is why we created this powerful set of tools to help you give them the best driver education available. Driver Ed in a Box® is a complete parent taught driver education course for new drivers.

Designed by nationally recognized driver training expert Patrick L. Barrett, Driver Ed in a Box provides parents with all the tools necessary to help their teens become safe, collision-free drivers.

Driver Ed in a Box is a driver-training curriculum that’s designed so you can teach your teen to drive…on your schedule.

The aim is to give you a simple training program that you can easily implement with your young adult.
Driver Ed In A Box® is for the parent/teen who wants a program that focuses on giving the instructor and student more tools for the Behind the Wheel phases.

It’s for the parents that truly want to help their son or daughter become a safe collision-free driver.
It’s for the teen that wants to score higher on the permit test and feel safer, more confident behind the wheel.

You are able to complete the course at your own pace, on your schedule. You don’t have to wait until the end of football season, or the start of summer vacation, to begin the training.

With Driver Ed in a Box® you’re allowed to MASTER each skill set before you move on to the next. The new driver will gain confidence in their skills and will not be intimidated by more traffic and possible dangers. Your teen will master the skills and know the dangers before they enter each new area of driving.

You want your teen to get their license, but more importantly, you also want your teen to be a safe, collision-free driver. At the end of this course, your teen will be a safe driver, and also have the confidence to drive in all kinds of traffic, any day of the week, any time of the day.

Driver Ed in a Box® produces collision-free drivers

Not Based on Theory, But Actual Documented Results

 

A review of the driving records of the graduates of the parent-taught driver education course, Driver Ed in a Box®, shows that while 16 year old drivers in the State of Texas have a collision rate of 11.4%, 16 year old drivers using Driver Ed in a Box® have a collision rate of only 1.7%.

What is a “collision rate”?

It is the number of collisions reported to the Department of Public Safety as reflected on the individual driver records divided by the number of licensed drivers in that category (then multiplied by 100 to convert to a percentage).

The latest published version of the Department of Public Safety’s Motor Vehicle Traffic Accident 2001 statistics book on page 36 states 141,357 licensed 16 year old drivers had 16,113 reported collisions for a collision rate of 11.4%.

In April of 2005 a random sample of 1,009 of Driver Ed in a Box® 16 year old graduates’ driving records were pulled directly from the Department of Public Safety’s records. The Driver Ed in a Box® 16 year old graduates had only 14 collisions for a collision rate of 1.7%.

Conclusion: Driver Ed in a Box® graduates
are significantly safer drivers…
over 8 times safer!

“I have received much more practice and personal attention in the home-taught driver’s ed than my friends, and I feel completely comfortable and in control.”

“My dad and I listened to the CD’s and watched several of the beginning videos, and my dad explained the terminology used before starting in the parking lot.

Once I began driving, I would say what actions I was doing, such as ‘Clear left, clear right, clear left’ or “Mirror.’

This system of driver Commenting was probably the most helpful part of the program, both because it made me conscious of whether or not I was doing the right things and it told my Dad exactly what I was thinking so that he would know if I was aware of the hazards or if he needed to alert me.

We began driving in the parking lot, progressing next to light residential streets and then to streets with faster speeds and heavier traffic. Freeway driving was my final step in urban driving.




 

 


1 comment:

Driving School Melbourne said...

Learning to drive in US is not that easy. Some state in US have high standard that made it more harder to pass.

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