Title: CIECA Congress
1Driver Licensing A North American Perspective
CIECA Congress
Marseille, France ? June 9, 2006
Allan F. Williams Bethesda, MD USA
2- Should the driver education teacher be
responsible only for whether the student can
drive adequately or whether he actually does
drive in this manner? - Pat Waller, 1977
3Dekalb driver education evaluation study
- Random assignment of 16,338 students to a program
considered to be state-of-the-art (SPC), a
minimum education group, or a control group. - SPC program more than 70 hours of instruction,
allocated between classroom, simulator, closed
course, and on-road training. - No positive effects on subsequent crash
involvement.
41960s Michigan Insight training program
- High school seniors participated in 7 two-hour
sessions, dealing with the effects of anger,
frustration, and competition on driving
situational factors and how to deal with them
discussion of collisions and close calls
experienced examination of personal driving
styles and changes needed. - No effect on subsequent crash involvement.
5Worldwide reviews of driver education evaluations
- Mayhew et al. (1998) Canada
- Vernick et al. (1999) USA
- Wooley (2000) Australia
- Christie (2001) Australia
- Roberts (2002) UK (Cochrane review)
6- The research literatures suggests that beyond
imparting basic car control and road law
knowledge skills, pre-license driver training
contributes little to post-license reductions in
casualty crashesThis pattern of results has been
confirmed and replicated across numerous studies
conducted in Australia, New Zealand, North
America, Europe, and Scandinavia during the last
30 years. - Ron Christie, 2001
7Driver crash involvements per million
miles
traveled1995
8Principles of graduated licensing
- Keep young beginners out of high-risk driving
situations - Encourage low-risk on-road practice driving
- Find appropriate trade-off between safety and
mobility - Delay full driving privileges until teenagers are
older and starting to mature out of risky driving
practices
9Different styles of graduated licensing
- North America, New Zealand Restrictions on
high-risk driving - Australia Long probationary periods
- Europe Reductions in the learner age
10Fatal crashes per 100 million milesDay vs.
night, by driver age, 2001-02
driver age
11Crash rates by driver age and passenger
presencePer 10,000 trips
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
2
3
0
1
2
3
0
1
2
3
ages 18-19
ages 30-59
ages 16-17
number of passengers
12Number of fatally injured drivers and
passengersU.S., 2004
13Crashes per 10,000 drivers, Nova ScotiaBy months
of licensure
months
14Graduated licensing basics
- Learner stage 6-month minimum, require parent
certification of at least 50 hours of practice - Intermediate stage unsupervised driving not
allowed late at night, and when transporting
young passengers - Full license delayed until age 17 or 18
15What states have done
16Evaluations of graduated licensing programs
17Crash rates of 18-20 year-old Norwegian
Drivers by time since licensing test Crashes per
million vehicle kilometers
Fridulv Sagberg Institute of Transport
Economics Oslo, Norway
1-2
3-4
5-6
7-8
9-10
13-14
11-12
15-16
months with drivers license
18Graduated licensing and driver education
- Graduated licensing now established as policy
- Driver education well established as method for
learning to drive - The challenge coordinating graduated licensing
and driver education to enhance effects
19Present status of driver education
- Decline in school-based programs
- Driver ed industry highly fragmented, great
variety, use of technology aids - Growing popularity of advanced training courses
- Issue quality of programs and instructors
20Coordination of graduated licensing and
driver education
- Two-phase driver education programs
- Programs with a parent component
- Partnering driver education and lay instructors
to maximize supervised driving experience - Potential for driver education instructors to
advise and motivate parents, making them better
supervisors
21Conclusions
- Graduated licensing in the U.S. has become
popular, well accepted, and has reduced the
young driver problem. - Graduated licensing and driver education
co-exist, and coordinating these two programs has
potential for further reducing the problem. - The possibilities for coordination have not been
fully explored or tested.