Canadian insurer's position on driver training
By: Drivers.com staff
Date: 1995-09-09
In the wake of a research study called "The Role of Driving Experience," the Insurance
Bureau of Canada (IBC) has produced some key recommendations on driver
testing and training.
The study, by the Traffic
Injury Research Foundation of Canada, was commissioned by IBC, the major
Canadian trade association for property and casualty insurers.
In a recently issued position paper, IBC sets out the critical factors determining
driving experience as being:
- Psychomotor Skills: related to the ability to handle the vehicle (e.g.,
steering and braking);
- Perceptual Skills: related to the ability to perceive the driving environment
accurately (e.g., sign recognition, scanning, hazard detection);
- Cognitive Skills: related to the ability to make appropriate decisions
and judgments (e.g., speed adjustment for driving conditions, passing); and
- Attitudes and Motivations: related to concern for safety and the willingness
to exercise responsible driving behavior (e.g., overconfidence, caution,
fear, risk-taking, sensation-seeking).
"Having reviewed the current state of knowledge in these areas-supplemented
by a survey of expert opinion-the IBC study found considerable scientific evidence
showing that certain critical experience factors influence the level of risk
faced by new drivers," says the position paper. "In fact, such evidence had
to be present for a specific experience variable to be considered a critical
factor," the paper adds.
IBC says a subsequent evaluation showed that eight critical experience-related
factors are not being adequately addressed by existing driver training and
testing programs in Canada. These factors are:
- Steering Control
- Speed Control
- Visual Search/Scanning
- Hazard Perception
- Decision-Making
- Personal Risk Assessment
- Lifestyle
- Risk-Taking
"The evidence suggests that these factors should be given the highest priority
by the provinces when considering changes that would improve the effectiveness
of driver training and testing programs," the paper says. Recommendations by
the IBC to improve current road tests include:
- Increasing the length of the test (currently a maximum of 30 minutes) so
that applicants are required to demonstrate their abilities over a wider
array of traffic situations and circumstances, such as driving at night or
on expressways;
- Eliminating unnecessary or ineffective measures-for example, staring the
vehicle, parallel parking-so that the limited time available can be used
to assess more relevant skills;
- Modifying the role of the driver examiner to encourage more interaction
between the examiner and the applicant-for example, posing questions about
the rules of the road while the applicant is driving-thus creating a more
demanding, multiple-task situation;
- Rating searching/scanning ability for each driving situation or maneuver
on the test, for example, having the examiner pay closer attention to mirror
checks performed by new drivers to determine if effective visual searching
of the road environment is taking place;
- Using automated testing procedures such as simulation and computer-aided
testing for new drivers, primarily for purposes of hazard detection and to
provide exposure to a wide array of driving conditions and circumstances
not always possible during an on-road test (note that these methods could
also be used to help identify individuals who display risking driving behaviors);
- Making the road test a diagnostic and educational tool, for example, identifying
specific deficiencies and prescribing corrective training before re-testing.
The IBC says that driver education and training programs also need to re-examine
their emphasis on critical experience-related skills and consider methods to
enhance the teaching of these skills. It suggests the following program modifications:
- Extending the time frame for on-road instruction beyond the current limited
period of 10 to 12 hours, so that more than just rudimentary skills can be
acquired;
- Placing more emphasis on critical skills and tasks-for example, how to
integrate skills under different conditions such as night driving-and less
on relatively unimportant maneuvers such as parking;
- Better matching of teaching strategies to the types of skills that need
to be learned, for example, multi-stage training consisting of frequent periods
of short duration to cover the basic skills, and longer sessions over a more
extended time frame for complex skills;
- Tailoring programs to identify and correct critical vehicle-handling skills
that some novice drivers have difficulty overcoming;
- Having the student, while driving, report to the instructor on decision
alternatives, choices and risk assessments-referred to as "commentary driving";
- Introducing lifestyle education to discourage risky behaviors at an early
age, long before the age of driver licensing.
IBC says the report, "The Role of Driving Experience", represents one of the
most comprehensive studies of driver training and testing methods every undertaken
in Canada.
"While our knowledge is still evolving, the research demonstrates that there
is considerable room for improvement in existing driver education/training
and testing procedures. More important, there is scientific evidence to support
a greater emphasis on experience-related factors in the instruction and testing
of new drivers-evidence on which the recommendations of this position paper
are based.
"To be optimally effective, driver training and testing should be integrated
into a multi-stage licensing system. Graduated licensing recognizes this and
provides an opportunity to achieve such integration in a way that can significantly
improve the process of learning to driver," the IBC adds.
"The adoption of graduated licensing by several provinces in Canada has been
a substantial step forward for road safety in Canada. As other provinces adopt
graduated licensing-and all jurisdictions continue to seek improvements in
road safety-it is now time to take the next steps and full integrate complementary,
experience-related driver training and testing procedures into the licensing
system."
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