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What parents can do to help their newest drivers
By Karen Braynard
Correspondent
Last year a teenage driver, who had been
licensed for less than a month, lost control
of her vehicle and smashed into our van,
totaling both her parents. car and my van.
Luckily, no one was seriously hurt. Motor
vehicle accidents can happen to anyone, but
for teens new to the road, the potential for
an accident is much higher than for experienced
drivers.
Statistics from the New Hampshire
Driver's Manual state that while drivers
between the ages of 15 to 20 only make up
25 percent of the driving population, they
are involved in 40 percent of all traffic accidents
and almost 35 percent are involved
in fatal accidents. And motor vehicle accidents
are the leading cause of death for
American teenagers.
State mandated driver's education is one
way to ensure new drivers have some experience
before venturing on the road without
supervision.
"Parental involvement is the key to success
for young drivers," says officer Russ
Bailey of the New Hampshire Highway
Patrol.
Bailey says that inexperience is the biggest
problem for teen drivers. He is quick to
point out that while teens are involved in a
high number of traffic accidents,
they are not always at fault.
Parents can help by spending a
lot of time preparing their teen
behind the wheel.
"Vary the routes your teen
drives. Find new roads to drive
on, get out on the interstate,
drive at different times of the
day. The more experience young
drivers have the better they will
be at making decisions on the
road."
Unlike many other states, New
Hampshire does not require a
driver's permit. Teens can begin
driving at the age of 15-1.2.
All they need is their birth certificate
in the car and a licensed
driver older than 25.
If teens are younger than 18,
completion of a certified driver
's training course is required
if they want their drivers license
between the ages of 16 and 18.
According to Officer Bailey,
there are state standards
for these courses which set the
minimum requirements.
Driver's training is available
at all of the public high schools,
but those classes fill up fast and
are often hard to get into. The
state requires that the student be
16 years old by the last day of
the class to enroll. This timing
issue complicates when students
can actually enroll in the course.
There are many certified driving
schools in the local area, which
is the route that many families
take to get their teens licensed.
Private driving schools are
also used by the growing number
of homeschoolers.
"Not because the schools
don't accommodate us," says
Jane Grady, a homeschooling
mother in Derry. "The local
schools are supportive in trying
to accommodate homeschooled
students, but even the kids
enrolled in school can't get into
driver's training at the appropriate
time."
Grady says that in the past,
correspondence courses could
be used by homeschooled teens
and that fulfilled the drivers
training requirement, but that is
no longer the case.
Homeschoolers often have
very busy schedules and with
this new requirement, families
find they need to put a lot
of other activities on the back
burner while their teen goes
through the course.
Gordon Ferno, the instructor
at the AAA Driving School in
Hooksett, says it is very important
for all parents to realize that
driver's training needs to take
priority.
"Class time has to be made
up. If parents and their teens
put their sports, drama, church
activities, etc., ahead of their
driver's training, then it will
take even longer to finish," he
said. "They might have to wait
for another class to catch up with
the information they miss."
The courses do take up a lot
of time. There are 30 hours
of classroom work, 10 hours
of supervised driving with an
instructor, and 6 hours of observing
another student driving with
the instructor. In addition, while
the students are in driver's training,
they are also required to
drive on their own time with
their parents.
When they apply for their
driver's license, they must show
their driving log which proves
they have spent no less than 20
hours driving with a licensed
adult in the vehicle.
Throughout the course at the
AAA Driving School, students
must maintain an 80 percent
overall grade on three exams. If
students are having problems,
Ferno can assist them by providing
some remedial training
and requesting more parental
involvement.
Putting safe drivers on the
road is the ultimate goals of
all training schools. The AAA
Driving School goes one step
further and provides a followup
driver's improvement course,
free of charge for its students,
one year later.
Private training is expensive,
but parents tend to want their
teens licensed as soon as possible.
Courses can run from $400
to $800.
However, even after teens
have their license, there are two
restrictions in place during their
first six months of driving. They
are not allowed to drive between
the hours of 1 a.m. and 5 a.m.
and may only have one nonfamily
member in the vehicle.
There are a lot of pressures
on teens and driving is a big
one. But the more one-on-one
support parents provide to their
young drivers, the less likely
they will be to cause an accident
and their reaction time and
decision making can be greatly
improved with supervised time
behind the wheel.
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