Sschell
Dude?
I don't know.... this may be a job for bendo...
speaking of which..... where is Mr. ver?
speaking of which..... where is Mr. ver?
they have Hr requirements in IL now and recent increased them, but I missed all that. It started the yr after i got my license. My parents had to deal with that with my sister though.Consistent with what Supe said, it's my expereince that boys may be more "aggressive" but thay are also more attentive and more concious of their surroundings. girls are more preoccupied with the radio or phone and less aware of things around them, which IMHO is just as bad or worse than going fast.I sympathize, benbo. Ours are both "experienced" drivers now. But it was not easy getting them there. And we have 2 girls. Boys, I imagine, are more aggressive drivers.
Driver's Ed is no substitute for actual driving/teching. In MA they recently (2007 increased the number of hours that kids need to log before they can road test. Also PARENTS are required to have 2 hrs. classroom "training" as part of Driver's Ed.My parents paid for drivers ed so they didn't have to deal with the teaching.
from here: http://www.mass.gov/rmv/rmvnews/2007/driver_ed_regs.htm
Behind the Wheel Training: Required 12 hour behind-the-wheel driver education training (up from 6 hours) and required 40 hours of parent-supervised driving (up from 12 hours).
Parent Curriculum: Required two-hour parent/guardian class on the driving skills and rules their children should be learning and practicing throughout the driver education experience.
Not sure how these drills will improve your driving but they are certainly good life skills to have.My dad put me through car boot camp when I turned 16 and it was one of the best things he ever taught me. One of the challenges was changing a tire within a taped off area that was supposed to simulate the shoulder of a highway. Step outside the tape = failure. Another one was he left his headlights on over night and got me up at 5 am to jump start his truck (if he was late to work = failure). I had to be able to identify all the fluids in the car by the color.
Congratulations. I guess I'm not nuts. Hugging the blue line is no different than driving in the wrong lane. Also, in a U-turn situation, hugging the blue line leaves you unable to see oncoming traffic if two cars are turning.red, but with a stop at the center before you cross the bottom road.Bottom road is not one way. Also, think of traffic moving right having to do a u-turn to go left.if the road you would be turning on is also one way then either would work.Million dollar question: which is the right way to cross a divided highway to turn down the road on the bottom - red or blue?
Fixed if for you Mary.Boys, I imagine, aremore aggressivebetter drivers.
And, we should listen to advice about driving from "ROADWRECK"????!!Fixed if for you Mary.Boys, I imagine, aremore aggressivebetter drivers.
Yes, I have lots of experience on the subject.And, we should listen to advice about driving from "ROADWRECK"????!!Fixed if for you Mary.Boys, I imagine, aremore aggressivebetter drivers.
I feel bad for Mr. Snick.Haven't driven a stick shift in years but it should come back to me if the need ever arises.
A very PG way of saying what several of us were thinking...I feel bad for Mr. Snick.Haven't driven a stick shift in years but it should come back to me if the need ever arises.
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