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Driver's Handbook

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Driver's Handbook

It is Not Unusual to Need Help Through Canada Driving School

Anyone who has had to obtain a driver’s license in Canada knows it is not easy in most of the provinces, and overall, harder than in many other places in the world. People coming from the States are even surprised at just how hard the exams are to pass, and how stiff some of the fines are for breaking the rules. Canada is a tough place to get a license, and much of it has to do with the outlook Canadian government has in a responsibility to protect their citizenry. Some of the challenges hinges on the fact some provinces have auto insurance that is provincially controlled and run.  The government, i.e. taxpayers, are footing the bill for avoidable collisions and injuries, and the government is attempting to be proactive in controlling both injuries and cost by making sure people are ready to drive.

Testing goes through various levels, and the learning period is far longer than in most places. The exams are harder, and you have to wait in some cases, between each examination attempt if you fail. Many people, especially new drivers and those immigrating, think it would be helpful to attend driving school Canada focused to learn what they need to pass the tests. Sadly, more and more people are failing, especially with the new, stricter standards that were passed in the last several years. The reason is because good, fundamental skills are not taught; passing the test is often the focus. It is well known many people do not put in the actual number of driving practice hours required by the province, and never really apply what they learned.  Lack of knowledge and lack of learned skills is a dangerous pair of problems when you are behind the wheel of a car.

All Canadian Driving School Programs Want You To Pass The Test

Most people who have to drive in Canada trust driving school will help them get better, learn the skills they need, and get them through the Graduated Driver Licencing programs easier. It is to the advantage of the driving school for you to pass, and quickly get you to put up a review so more students come spend money to take some lessons. Driving schools are expensive and the investment is usually not rolled over for more lessons for free if you do not pass.

When I owned one of the prominent driving schools in the region for nearly 20 years, I had many student sent to me from other driving schools who simply could not pass the driving test. Sometimes they had been to several schools, paying the fees multiple times to the tune of thousands of dollars, and still did not possess the skills or confidence the examiner needed to see to hand them a license. Since I was almost always successful as an instructor teaching those same students what they needed to know, not just to pass the test, but to be comfortable behind the wheel and to become good, safe drivers, I had to figure out what was different. I finally realized it was not only how I taught, but also what I taught. I was not teaching to the test, I was teaching them to drive. There is a huge difference.

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What I saw in those students, all my students, was they had to have certain skills they knew and could implement without thinking about but doing so automatically, smoothly, confidently, to handle a vehicle safely on the roadways. Most the maneuvers we make in a car are not automatic – we have to learn them. We usually pick up a lot of the information from watching adults drive, figuring out what they are looking at, asking questions about what something does, observing how they check things before they start the engine. In other words, all those “What?” and “Why?” and “Which” questions we drove adults crazy with as kids. Those observed and absorbed skills were sadly lacking in the students sent to me, because any more we ride in the car but are not active riders. What I mean by that is we are not paying attention, instead, we are engaged with our electronics. Riders cannot even tell you what is between two points on the route because we never look up. This lack of having learned a lot about what was expected and how to do it was being completely missed by the driving schools, who wanted you to pass rules of the road, then the driving test on the route the examiner was apt to take you for your skills test.

Foundational skills are what everyone needs when they drive, and skills need to be well-established practices, understood and done in nearly automatically mode. Those kind of skills, from how to park to the correct way to turn left into traffic plus much more are all covered in the Digital Driver Education course. Easy to understand, short, and from the driver’s seat perspective, the videos can be watched over and over, in sequence or just the one you need to review for an entire year at the low price of $197. That is far less than any driving course in the area. You will learn what you need to, not only to pass the test, but also to become a confident, safe driver. The course is good for new drivers of any age, experienced drivers wanting to brush up on skills, or immigrants who need to know how certain things are done here that are different than home. I am so confident you will find the program extremely valuable that I offer a full money back guarantee for the first 90 days after purchase.

 

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