In the United States, traffic crashes occur every 12 seconds?
In fact, you are more likely to be killed in an automobile crash
than in any other way.
Did you know that vehicular crashes are now the No. 1 cause
of death among young adults. The Florida Sheriffs Association
are working to change that. They created a new statewide driving
program that challenges young adults to improve their driving:
The Teen Driver Challenge.
The Teen Driver Challenge is expected to be introduced in communities
throughout the state in 2007. Learn
more.
Look below to see if Teen Clinics is in your area.
Take an early look at what the teen driving course has to offer:
shuffle steering, threshold braking, off road recovery. Sign
up now for a course in your county. (video)
Each year, vehicle crashes kill more American teens than alcohol,
drugs and suicide combined. Tampa Bay’s 10 installs hidden
cameras in a teen’s car to find out what makes young drivers
so dangerous. (more)
Seven Do and Don't Do Guidelines When Instructing Your
Teenager To Drive.
Drive HomeSafe.com
Put "safety" above everything else
when driving. Try not doing too much too soon.
Don't rush the training process. If you do, you risk
putting your teenager in a situation beyond yours and your teenager's
abilities to handle.
"Know what you want to do" before you and your
teenager begin a practice session. Tell your teenager what the two
of you will practice.
Encourage your teenager to give you feedback. Make
sure your teenager feels comfortable trying what you plan to practice.
When you give your teenager driving instructions, use
a calm tone.
Never wait the last minute telling your teenager what
you want he or she to do.
Be specific. Never point with your finger and say, "let's
go over there". Instead, say to your teenager, "when you
reach the next traffic light, turn right into the supermarket's parking
lot". Don't expect your teenager to read your mind.
Methodically take your new teen driver through nine
(9) distinct steps.
Parking Lot...Take
your teenager to a open parking lot area, like a shopping mall, or somewhere
no cars can interfere. The last place to begin training a new teen driver
is pedestrian streets/roads, no matter how much traffic may be traveling
them.
Street driving...Once
your young teen driver demonstrates control over a few fundament skills,
go the next step driving low-traffic pedestrian streets, and roads.
Destination driving – supermarket, church,
high school, movie theater...As
your young teen driver's skills progress effectively managing traffic,
practice driving to locations he/she is likely to frequent or visit.
By the time your Teen Driver is ready to drive solo, going to these
destinations will be familiar.
Freeway driving...At
some point your Teen Driver is going to drive on freeways at speeds equaling
and exceeding 55 miles per hour. Judge how ready your teenager is to
take this next step. Freeways are dangerous to drive when inexperience,
especially entering, and exiting them.
Map driving...Here,
you and your Teen Driver can practice the finer points of driving, which
include following a map and driving in areas somewhat unfamiliar. Teach
your young teen driver where to safely stop for directions to reach a
certain destination. Have him/her do it a few times.
Night street driving...It
is one thing to drive in the daylight, it is another experience to drive
at night. Basically, your Teen Driver’s training sessions start
over. But this time at a different level of risk and skill level required.
Situation driving...Simulate
and role play real life driving situations your Teen Driver will encounter.
In these sessions, you will carefully introduce to your Teen Driver distractions,
tensions and temptations to learn resisting, and managing. For
instance, pretend being a peer-teenager. Talk about how your teen driver
should manage the situation.
Self-Direct...In
this section you will probably have the most fun as Parent/Coach. The
goal is to build your Teen Driver’s base of experience with hours
of unstructured driving. Have your young teen driver chauffeur you
on errands; judge whether your young teen driver can join the rotation
driving on longer trips.