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"I'm a fully qualified driving instructor"
Quote from: "Range Rover Blues""I'm a fully qualified driving instructor"I'm still learning - it's bloomin hard
Another IAM driver here. The good thing about doing the IAM test is that it teaches you the difference between "good driving" and what you believe is good driving. It's interesting to try and drive to that standard a few years after taking the test: you recognise your own bad habits creeping back.Andy
The problem with that idea is that neither of these organisations are officially qualified to test anyone's driving.
oi oi hold on. i feel a bit of the underage drivers are all the problem theme coming on. how unfair. ill have you know there are a lot of 'young' drivers who are better then some adults, and young drivers are a LOT better then the old drivers who drive around in their stooooooooooopid honda's driving at 30mph everywhere. now stop going on about young drivers causing the problems. all this L drivers talk once people [pass their tests they can be very good drivers, the tests are getting really quite difficult, and i think that if all adults took their test now i bet you at least 50% would fail on the spot. Rob
I have to confess that, as a professional driver, I don't hold the IAM test in such a high regard as you do. Admitedly it is one step above the defensive driving techniques course, but it is nowhere near perfect./quote]Of course it's not perfect. I didn't say it was. For sure though it's far better than the "L" test. Unless DSA are going to devise a completely new course and test then it's the only tried and tested option currently available in the UK.I offer it as an achievable avenue for further training for newly qualified drivers. The course teaches the system of car control (as used by all UK police forces) and the test is simply a method of finding out how much of that training has sunk in.
Oops, is thread hogging as anti-social as middle-lane hogging?
Hi Rob, I'm not bashing young drivers in particular, my views of further training apply equally to newly qualified drivers of all ages. :)
May be they should start to use the motorbike principle. A basic test to get restricted access to the roads, then a more advanced to remove restrictions once you have passed a certain age.For driving Instructors, do they cover dual carriageways and motorways in driver training and testing?Didn't when I did mine, but then my examiner got lost and I had to give him directions back to the test center! :lol: