Choose a Neighborhood
It’s your responsibility to pick a neighborhood that doesn’t have too many problems or too much traffic. Your search for a location may be simple or may take some time, depending on where you live. Before you start in a neighborhood, go ahead and warm up a little bit in the parking lot. Just review some of the things you did and make sure that your teen leaves the parking lot having been refreshed in good habits, and is loose and relaxed behind the wheel. You don’t want to start in the neighborhood with white knuckles on the steering wheel.
Your teen must have the necessary habits of looking well ahead, clearing intersections and keeping space without thinking about doing those things. No matter how good your teen’s character and how good a driver your teen is when you’re in the vehicle, when you are not there, they’re going to do things more out of habit. Like you, they will not always be thinking about driving.
Be patient with yourself on this and be patient with your teen. Understand that just doing it a couple of times correctly doesn’t mean the teen has developed the habit of doing it right. Doing it a couple of times might be enough evidence for your teenager to think, “Hey, I got this. Why should I do it again? Let’s move on, I’m ready.” Understand that if you go out for an hour, you might do 15 to 20 miles in the course of your driving. Over the course of your lifetime, you will probably drive over a million miles. That’s just 20,000 miles a year for 50 years.
That’s not an uncommon number. So to believe that a new driver is going to be prepared to drive a million miles, collision-free, with just 50, 60 or maybe 100 miles in a few lessons, is ludicrous. Be patient and repeat the drills with your teen until you’re confident that when you go out in the neighborhood your teen will, by habit, clear intersections, look well ahead, use turn signals and mirrors, — all those things. Most critically, be certain that you and your teen are communicating well and clearly.
City Traffic (Light-Heavy) – Introduction
By now you have finished the neighborhood training, or you feel you will soon finish that training area, and you probably feel that both you and your youngster are ready to move into light traffic.
Remember, you build from the foundation up to build the habits of collision-free driving, and you have been laying your foundation with care. Now, just take a deep breath and relax. You and your teen can do this. We’ll cover how to get into light traffic and begin to read the traffic scene as it gets more complicated. We’re going to add a few more Commentary terms and phrases, and add some additional concepts.
How do I know when my teen is ready?
Your teen is ready to move on from light traffic when:
1. Your teen slows well in advance for a turn without your coaching,
2. You don’t have to worry if your teen is going to run a light,
3. Your teen is clearing every intersection,
4. Your teen is leaving extra space,
5. Reading traffic from the rear,
6. Moving his/her eyes about every two seconds,
7. Picking the path of least resistance,
8. Staying out of other people’s blind spots,
9. Adjusting when others cut you off,
10. Being patient with the traffic
11. And doing all this without being coached by you – in other words, is using these habits of collision-free driving.
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