Thursday, October 1, 2009

Do It For the Kids!

October 18 – 24 is this year's National Teen Driver Safety Week. Now is the perfect time to remind the students in your driver improvement classes of the effects their negative driving behaviors can have on others — in particular, their children.

Most parents are certain that their kids don't listen to a thing they say. Research shows, however, that parental involvement is the single most important factor in reducing the risk of crash involvement for young drivers.

And the risk of a crash is considerable. Learning to drive could be the most dangerous milestone in a teen's life, as automobile collisions are the leading cause of death for 15- to 20-year-olds. In Florida in 2008, 13,916 teen drivers were killed or injured in over 36,000 crashes. Teens are involved in three times as many fatal crashes as all other drivers, per vehicle mile driven. And it's not just teens who are injured or killed: young drivers pose a risk to other drivers, passengers, and pedestrians. (For more statistics, check out the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration's latest Traffic Safety Fact Sheet on Young Drivers.)

Remind your students that, because teens tend to model their parents' driving behavior, they need to take a good, hard look at their behind-the-wheel habits. If not for their own safety, they should do it their children. After all, you never know who's watching!

»  You might also remind parents about your Traffic Law and Substance Abuse Education (TLSAE) seminar — aka the First Time Driver course — for teens. Nationally in 2007, 31% of young drivers (15 to 20 years old) who were killed in crashes had alcohol in their system!  «

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