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Boot camp for drivers

  • By Mark Hinchliffe
  • The Courier-Mail
image Accomplished race-car driver John Tetley has created his own 2 day course for kids to gain a better attitude on the road.

Driver attitudes need to be shaped before young people reach driving age, according to Qld Raceway owner John Tetley.

That is why he has set aside $500,000 to create what he believes is Australia's first behavioural driver training school at the historic Lakeside International Raceway at Petrie, north of Brisbane.

“We need to get young people's attitude to driving right before they get their driving skills,” he said, quoting Albert Einstein; “Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age 18.”

“Scary when you think about it, but at least it supports my notion of getting it (the right driving attitude) into them before they get their licence,” he said.

Tetley plans to launch his two-day Road User Boot Camp (RUB) in July, targeting school children in Years 10 and 11.

Rather than teaching road skills or driving skills like most driver training schools, Tetley plans to teach basics such as car maintenance, attitudinal skills to resist peer pressure, and how to avoid road rage and dangerous road situations.

“Some 75 per cent of drivers under 25 can't change a wheel,” he said. “No one teaches kids the basics such as checking the car before they drive off.

“There will also be some fun things as well, such as simulators and go-karts.”

Tetley said cars were becoming safer, but he was concerned that technology such as anti-skid brakes and stability control were replacing driving skills.

“Kids don't understand the forces involved in a car,” he said.

Currently any driving tuition done off the road, such as at a driver-training centre or racetrack like Lakeside, is not eligible to be credited in the 100 hours of training; yet learners must do it before they can sit for a licence.

He hopes his RUB camp may be considered exempt from this ruling because it does not teach driving or road skills.

“I'm worried that the 100 hours is just reinforcing negative practices and attitudes. In Britain you have to go to driver training before you can even drive on the road. I can see a political battle to get it accredited,” he said.

Tetley said his school would not compete with other driving schools."

“I'm giving kids the right attitude before they go to a driving school.”

Tetley's program includes a self-assessment and asks the students to assess their parents' driving.

“We want them to understand that no one is a perfect driver,” he said. “We need to change their attitude to other people's driving and drive as though other people are going to make an error.

“I still make mistakes and have other drivers blowing the horn at me,” said Tetley, who is an accomplished race-car driver.

“Five per cent of drivers are total idiots. Ten per cent are so smart they will never be a problem. The others just need some guidance.”

Tetley said he initially would aim at private schools and charge about $200 a person to “cover costs” for the two-day course with accommodation and meals included.

“I'd also like to see it go national but not as a franchise. I'd just like others to pick up the idea.”

Learner logbooks

* Learner drivers under 25 are required to complete 100 hours of supervised on-road driving experience, including 10 hours of night driving.

* When they get their learner licence, they receive a learner logbook to record supervised on-road driving.

* Supervisors can be anyone with an open licence for one year.

* A one-hour lesson with an accredited driving instructor counts for three hours in the learner logbook, up to a maximum of 30 hours.

* Time spent at advanced driving courses at off-street venues cannot be credited to the logbook.

* If Queensland Transport suspects the logbook has been fudged, learners will have to wait six weeks after a completed logbook is submitted before taking a practical driving test.


Do you think young driver training like John Tetley's boot camp is a good idea? Should it become a compulsory step in acquiring a licence? Share your thoughts below...


 

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 13 comments

  • Mistakes come in three forms: physical (getting used to driving, adjusting to the vehicle, and getting your nerves together, assessing your mental condition), cognitve (understanding the rules and how they apply in various situations), and habit (some things pass out of the conscious realm of decision making when they are repeated and reinforced). We work to make people conscious of things that are bad habits, however as to the idea of training in a behaviorist model this would require 1) understanding what students really percieve as reward punishment, and 2) consistently applying these rewards and punishments until subconscious associations form between specific behaviors and the punishments and rewards. I find that I can get a lot out of my students just by explaining how it should be done, why, and helping them reject the wrong feedback from bad drivers. Yet, the simulator I drove in when I was ten years old really did train a conditioned response to fish-tailing that I have used without hesitation many times. Yay for education!

    Mark Merritt - Community Driving Solutions, Berkel of Berkeley, CA USA Posted on 03 April 2008 12:02am
  • What a great idea. This course should be a subject choice in year 12 in all schools. Kids have to be better-off with any kind of positive extra education where cars are concerned. I have raced around Lakeside and Surfers Paradise tracks and Mt. Cotton skidpan and the experience is rewarding knowing that I would be able to control my car in an out of control situation.

    Joanne Cope of Albany Creek-Brisbane Posted on 17 March 2008 2:36pm
  • Not a big fan of this boot camp idea... purely because its $200 thats way too expensive just to learn how to think and change a tyre (god get anyone to teach you that!)... Let alone as if a lesson is gunna change your behaviour you gutta be joking. P platers have enough problems blowing money on the govt to try and get their license, why should they have more expenses and especially an expensive expense!!!???

    Sands Posted on 12 March 2008 4:55pm
  • Sounds like a fantastic idea John. I have a daughter in year ten and a son in year 11 that would benefit tremendously from a course like yours. Is it possible for them to enrol in one of your courses? I would be happy to fly them over from Darwin to receive your training.

    michael wadrop of Darwin Posted on 12 March 2008 11:05am
  • Well John what an excellent plan this is,i guess we all owe the younger generation heaps more skills and training on a private track,top idea,many years ago my Dad and i turned the first sods of ground over at Lakeside pushing out dams for the cattle with 2 TD24 dozers ex Snowy Mt Dam Project Machines,we attended many motor race events there over the following years,tear up the red tape,keep up the good work,congratulations.These days we cruise around in our old 1951 FORDS.

    Reg Sothman of LOGAN CITY. Posted on 11 March 2008 8:50pm
  • Great concepts. Would just like to suggest that it be available for those (like my own twin sons) who are in Year 12 and on Learner's Licences. I appreciate the desire to start changing attitudes early but older youths could still benefit, too.

    David Russell of Brisbane Posted on 11 March 2008 5:30pm
  • As a 16 year old L plater, I see a big contrast of my friends attitudes towards driving. This sort of education should be compolsry and government funded becase I beleive the biggest risk/safety feature in a car is the driver, technology will never replace competency. I am lucky to be in a situation where I have been driving since the age of 11 and have been shown the in-and-outs of a car but I don't know anybody that has simular experience prior to getting there L's. The licencing system is a unsafe and unfair but, of course, governments will never introduce this kind of thing because it's common sense and will REALLY reduce the road toll.

    karl Posted on 11 March 2008 5:25pm
  • Great idea. I've always maintained that people need the right attitude to be good drivers. Some young people just replace a skateboard with a motor vehicle but still have the same immature attitude as they did on the skateboard. I guess the key is maturity. Not everyone matures at the same age so we finish up with some drivers who are not mature enough to hold a licence and get a bad name for all young drivers.

    Garry Donnelly of NSW South Coast Posted on 11 March 2008 3:55pm
  • as a p-plater i reckon this would b great 4 those out there who dont kno much about cars ,i know people who dont know hot to check tyre pressures or even how to check oil level let alone change a tyre ..i was lucky in that my parents made me do driver defence coures that can help when in bad situations

    michael Posted on 11 March 2008 3:41pm
  • As a driver young enough to remember what it was like to first get my license and satiate "need for speed", but old enough to realise how dumb the fruits of that motivation were, I'd wholeheartedly agree with John. I have a lot of friends about that age, as well as following the young drivers car scene, and I see what people do and how potentially fatal it can be when people drive at a level far higher than they should on the road, let alone commensurate to their skills and the conditions. I wish that more organisations and governments would get serious about reducing the death toll on younger drivers, and resolve the issue and stop it from happening rather than work around it by trying to punish people after the fact.

    Alan of Sydney Posted on 11 March 2008 2:55pm
  • Very good idea, I come from Germany and part of getting your licence was several hours learning all about the maintenance and how it all works, includes everything from wheelchanges to engines. That was many many years ago, so we are certainly way behind in Australia. Before we drive on the road we should pass a theory test not only on road rules but about the car or bike in general. Keep up the good work and politicians might listen.

    Bernhard Johannsen of Sydney Posted on 11 March 2008 2:28pm
  • I THINK THAT IS A FINE IDEA I HAVE A 16.5 YEAR OLD . HE THINKS DOING THE DIVING LOGBOOK TIME OF 1OO HOURS WILL MAKE HIM A DRIVING ACE. THE YOUNG PEOPLE REQUIRE A LITTLE MORE PATIENCE TO SLOW DOWN AND REALLY LEARN THAT A CAR CAN BE A GREAT FRIEND OR A DEATH TRAP KILLING THE NOVICE OR STUPID DRIVER

    MICHAEL FRANZ ASSFALG of Brisbane Posted on 11 March 2008 1:45pm
  • Brilliant idea! I hope governments and schools take this onboard. Best of luck with to Mr Tetley with all the government red tape he will have to get through.

    Mark Pacey of Perth Posted on 11 March 2008 1:09pm
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