Category - Driving Tests

Don’t Judge A Book By Its Cover

Something I saw on a forum reminded me of the simple fact that you should never judge a book by its cover!

The discussion in question revolves around instructor training – teaching people to become ADIs. It’s a hot Some Kind of Learnertopic in the industry, because virtually no ADI who is currently on the register believes that anyone else should be allowed to join it. They have the same opinion of the trainee (“pinkie”) system – they may well have utilised that route to becoming an ADI themselves, but woe betide anyone else who tries it!

A couple of comments centre around the issue of whether someone is “cut out to be an instructor”.

As I write this, I’m trying hard to think of any job out there – I hate calling this one a “profession” when I see and hear some of those who do it – where it is a closed shop, and no one else is allowed to do it because admission to the Hallowed Halls is blocked.

If you are prepared to do the training, and to fight to grow your subsequent career, you can be anything you want to be – and I mean that in both the absolute sense (i.e. no one can stop you), and the relative sense (i.e. try hard enough and pass the tests, and you’re in). It doesn’t have to be a Divine Calling any more than it should be a Divine Right. This is precisely the way it should be.

Teaching people to drive isn’t rocket science. And, whether ADIs like it or not, the sole responsibility of an instructor is to teach new drivers enough to pass the test and to be safe enough to go out and gain more experience on the roads. It’s always been like that and, unless the minimum age for driving is raised to 35, it always will be!

In the end, all it is is a job. A simple, day-to-day job.

It is NOT the ADI’s responsibility if the newly-qualified driver chooses not to continue to learn or drive safely. It is NOT the ADI’s responsibility to change someone’s fundamental behaviour or character. And – extreme cases notwithstanding – it is NOT the ADI’s responsibility to decide if someone should be allowed to learn to drive or not.

This is where an ex-pupil of mine comes to mind from some years ago.

He was a really nice lad, and he had a good job with good prospects. But he was not a natural driver. Sometimes, I despaired at how I would ever get him to test standard and – in all honesty – in my own mind I was often hoping that he’d realise for himself that for his own sake, and everyone else out there on the roads, he’d give up the idea of learning to drive and stick to buses.

But I was totally wrong. You see, my feelings were based purely on my own enjoyment of the lessons sometimes (i.e. frustration) and my awareness of how much it was costing him (i.e. what I though his perception of me might be). He didn’t see it that way at all – he was always upbeat and was adamant that he was still learning, even when I was convinced we’d not moved forward at all when I compared my lesson notes from previous weeks.

In the end, he was with me for over two years, and he spent more that £4,000 on lessons. But he passed at the third attempt. I know for a fact that he is happily – and safely – driving every day now.

So, taking all this one step further back, and considering the trainee instructor rather than the trainee driver, does anyone have the right to declare who can and who can’t do this job? No!

It doesn’t matter if someone has been made redundant from their job and is now considering becoming an ADI. As long as they know the risks, the choice is theirs – certainly not mine. They don’t have to be über-dedicated, or be hand-picked by the Heavenly Host because all they’re doing is a job. They’re trying to support themselves financially. And if they don’t provide a good service then they’ll fail – which is simply part of the risk they assume when they decide to become ADIs.

The people who are always blaming new ADIs and trainees for their own predicament, and who believe that this job is a calling of some kind, should perhaps take a step back and look at their own position in a little more detail..

Many are so disillusioned and bitter – and have been for so many years now – that they come across as considerably less dedicated to the job than the people who’ve just been laid off from the local coal mine and who want to become instructors. And until a couple of years ago, they blamed Red Driving School for everything.

Now it appears to be anyone who is offering instructor training.

Yes, it would be nice if we could make it a closed shop, and have the ultimate say in who gets kicked off the register just because we’re having a tough time at the moment (as though the rest of the world isn’t). But that isn’t going to happen. Nor should it.

Test Pass: 7/1/2012

Tick!Well done Javid, who passed with 5 driver faults today. And still the good start to the year continues!

Strange weather, though. The forecast said it would be bright and breezy today. It’s dark and drizzly, and it’s only just started to be breezy this afternoon, so they were only 180° out. One of their better efforts, I guess.

A good result ahead of my first no-show of the year. She’s got ‘flu and she says she texted me, but I didn’t get it. Ah well, can’t have everything go well, I suppose.

Test Pass: 6/1/2012

tick_2Well done Emily, who passed this afternoon first time with 7 driver faults. And so, the good start to the year continues!

We’d moved your test because you were worried about the forecast for snow and cold weather that was circulated before Christmas (as were quite a few pupils now I think about it). As it happens, your original date before Christmas was warmer in Britain than most Mediterranean holiday resorts! And with the recent high winds and rain, you were getting worried about this one, as well.

Today was a bit nippy, but there was no wind and bright sunshine. A great result. I told you you were a good driver!

Test Pass: 3/1/2012

Tick!Well, that’s a proper good start to the year now – well done, Jack, who passed today first time with 11 driver faults.

We had a laugh last night on his final lesson, when he mentioned that the only thing he’d not miss about lessons was my car because it made his back ache. We then made the miraculous discovery that you can move it so it’s more comfortable!

It seems that all this time, when he’s been going through the cockpit routine at the start of a lesson, he hadn’t bothered to change the rake of the seat. To be fair, it was only after we moved to 2 hour lessons on the run up to his test he noticed the pain, and he did know about the rake really – just too bloody lazy to do anything about it!

A good result, though. Hopefully, this heralds a similar start to the year as the one I had in 2011, with a string of mainly first time passes.

Test Pass: 23/11/2011

Tick!

Well done to Inesh, who passed today with just 4 driver faults. A good driver, and a well-deserved result (in spite of some of those bloody strange things you’d been taught by your last instructor).

So, as well as that gig you went to last night, you got a Pass Certificate to round it off nicely today!

Good luck with your studies, and stay safe!

Test Pass: 14/11/2011

The Holy Grail II

Well done to Nerea, who passed first time with no driver faults at all!

I had my first ever one of these about a year ago – they are rare, rarer even than an intelligent Chelsea supporter – but Nerea’s clean sheet gives me special satisfaction.

Apart from it being her first attempt, I also taught her from scratch, so although all the hard work was hers, from my own perspective I feel particularly satisfied with the outcome.

She’s a great driver, and she’s been a model pupil – no cancellations whatsoever, always on time, and she made good use of a month’s worth of insurance so she could practice roundabouts in the family car with her grandad. I know she wants to get extra training – particularly on the motorways to start with. She’ll have no trouble whatsoever handling those.

Test Pass: 8/11/2011

Tick!

Well done to Anthony, who passed with 7 driver faults.

Anthony is probably the nicest guy I have ever taught, and even the examiner commented on that as an aside to me. He’s also a very good driver who deserves to be out there in a car, and not hanging around in the rain for a University Hopper bus, or having his bike stolen from outside his residential rooms.

Anyway, good luck with your exams and studies, and I hope you get that VW Polo you’ve been hoping for. This time next month, you’ll be adjusting the heater like a pro!

Test Pass: 25/10/2011

Tick!

Well done Richard, who passed with just 5 driver faults yesterday. It was worth it in the end, wasn’t it? Hopefully, this will give you that extra step you wanted in your chosen career.

Also, take on board what the examiner said at the end and consider doing Pass Plus. The test – passing it – is just the first stage of a lifelong learning curve, and any extra training at any point in your career (your chosen career path will almost certainly require you to do it) is going to be beneficial. Pass Plus is an excellent step if it is delivered properly, and we’ve only ever driven from your house to West Bridgford or near the test centre (there’s only so much driving you can do in 1 hour when you’re preparing for the test).

DSA Alert: Opinions on Independent Driving Sought

In another alert, the DSA is looking for help in evaluating independent driving (ID) a year after it was introduced. In it the DSA says that it wants to understand:

  • how learners prepare for their practical test
  • opinions about the changes

I can imagine already how a number of fossil instructors and prehistoric organisations out there are preparing to resubmit their umpteen-thousand word theses on the subject of why ID is going to bring the civilisation as we know it to an abrupt end – theses which they have repeated mercilessly for two years or more now – in response to this request.

Independent Driving Sample

In actual fact, independent driving has been a major success for the DSA and for 99.9% of driving test candidates who have had to do it. There is absolutely no question over this at all.

As for the other 0.1%? Well, they seem to comprise the entire pupil bank of the anti-DSA whingers and – in all honesty – appear to exist in theory only. No one has actually had any problems doing the ID phase, other than what you’d expect from people who aren’t ready to drive unaided just yet, and who fail their tests.

EDIT 23/10/2011: I was on a Pass Plus session with a pupil yesterday (22/10/2011) and she told me she’d received the email too and had sent her response back. She, too, thought that ID was a great idea.

I suspect those who have persisted in kicking up an unnecessary fuss over ID are going to find themselves in just about the tiniest minority possible if the opinions of test candidates are also being sought.

Test Pass: 23/9/2011

Tick!

Well done to Basun, who passed today with just 2 driver faults. A nice present in advance of your extended holiday back home, and I look forward to taking you on the motorway when you get your own car later this year.

I’ve mentioned before about how some pupils are arrogant little sods who make the job a real chore. You just don’t want to be with them.

Well, Basun is the complete opposite. An absolute pleasure to teach from start to finish, with perfect manners, a sense of humour (even under pressure), and genuinely happy to pass her test..