Cahuna wrote:Prodrive is good... but then as another course tutor I'm biased!
To me bad drivers seem to fall into one of two categories:
1. Ability - this covers the people that you see who have trouble controlling the car, mix up the lefts with the rights, don't see the car coming out of the intersection etc etc. I think this is actually quite a small percentage but this is the group that would be assisted by requiring more lessons for the driving test.
2. Attitude - this is by far the larger group, who know how to control a car (sometimes at high speeds) but cause carnage. This is for a number of reasons... driving outside their skill range, driving too fast for the conditions, drinking and driving, showing off to their mates etc etc. Improved driver training requirements won't fix this group, denying them a licence until they grow up will (and taking the licence away from those who already have it but act like idiots).
Think about it. The kid in Hawkes Bay who died after fleeing the cops? He probably knew how to control a car at the speed limit but choosing to drive that road at 180km/h to get away from the cops indicate an attitude problem. If he had just stopped he would still be alive. Street racers who wipe out? Same thing. Teen with car load of mates doing 120km/h in the rain and sliding into a power-pole? Poor decision-making skills and stupidity. BMW-driving executive who overtakes on yellow lines and kills a family coming the other way from colliding head-on, just because he wanted to save 30 seconds from his trip by passing a car NOW? Ban him for life. I've been competing in ClubSport events for 16 years now (and was club champ last year) so I like to think I know how to control a car... in the 13 years I've had my road licence I've had one solitary crash - last year, at 10km/h, because I was tired and was driving on auto-pilot instead of concentrating on the traffic around me.
The funniest thing with Prodrive is getting 2 macho boy-racer dudes into a car with a little lady and then finding that the little lady comprehensively hoses them in the driving skill tests - the hit on the ego they take is a wonder to behold! Prodrive is a very good course for teaching students skills that will help them avoid accidents in cars but I like to think the biggest thing it gives the participents is a greater respect for cars and an understanding that when a car bites it bites hard (usually the first time they have ever been in an "out of control" car is in Prodrive, a much safer environment to discover what happens that at 100km/h).
To me an advanced driving skills course (like trackdays) would be bad news as it would only give new drivers an over-inflated sense of confidence which could lead to them doing something stupid. Much better to teach people how to avoid a potential accident in the first place with skills like the vision zones practical in Prodrive. I actually found the Defensive Driving course very useful, not because I learned anything but because it made me aware of techniques for avoiding accidents that I subconciously knew already.
The best accident is one that never happens and the best way for that to happen is to drive sensibly and defensively so that the situation never arises.
And talking of Prodrive... if you are a student on the North Shore or Waitakeres and haven't signed up for Prodrive do so now! It is currently operating out of Hobsonville (until the end of Oct) and, if you are really unlucky, you might even get me as a tutor
(sorry for the rambling rant... it is a pet topic of mine and I've had plenty of thoughts on the subject in the last 13 years!)
Do you drive your own car in it? I'd love to do something like this, even tho i feel confident driving i know theres alot more i can learn! Plus its fun doing stuff like that legally