Driving School
Although some people prefer to get
individual and private driving instruction from friends or
family members, driving school may be a more appropriate
choice for those who want to learn how to drive. Attending
driving school will give you driving instruction in a
structured environment with a classic curriculum and
hands-on-experience. From driving school, you can expect to
learn how to drive, how to interact with traffic, how to drive
in different environments, and how to uphold your end of being
a responsible driver.
In driving school, you can rest assured that other beginning
drivers such as yourself, share the same anxiety and nervousness
that you do. However in a classroom setting, all of you can relax
and get down to the basics of driving. You'll learn with others
what your role will be as a driver on the road. You'll learn what
the different signs and signals stand for, and you'll learn which
equipment to use to control your car. In addition, you and your
driving school classmates will learn how to turn organized thinking
into safe and responsible thinking.
In addition to the basics, you'll also learn in driving school
how to avoid accidents and maneuver your car in dangerous weather.
You'll also lean how to park in unusual situations and proficiently
handle different types of intersections. Driving school instructors
will fully explain what passing and what being passed means. And as
more and more motorcyclists and bicyclists join in on highway
transportation systems, you'll learn how to interact with them
safely as well as with other roadway users.
As you might expect, driving school will also teach you how to
drive in different environments and conditions too. Towns, cities,
highways, expressways, and back woods lanes are all covered in
driving school curriculum. Since conditions in these environments
will not always be ideal, you'll learn how to drive safely in these
places as well as how to handle emergencies.
Driving school also covers lessons that deal with how your
physical and emotional condition can affect your driving ability.
You'll learn how drugs and alcohol affect your responsibility, and
other lessons teach you how to properly care for your car as a
precautionary measure. That includes learning about buying a car,
insuring a car, and buying fuel for a car.
Learning how to drive from textbooks in driving school is almost
always accompanied by hands-on-training. That means that in
addition to learning how to drive in a classroom, you'll also learn
how to drive on the streets by getting into a car and actually
doing it! Of course, you won't drive alone. Instead, you'll drive
with a group of classmates and take an excursion around your
familiar neighborhood with your instructor in the car. Most driving
school cars have two steering wheels and two sets of brakes - one
operated by the student and one operated by the instructor. The
steering wheel and brakes that the instructor uses overrides the
ones used by the student in the event of a potential accident.
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