Archive for July 1st, 2010

 

Are Driving Crash Courses Any Good?

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

When people decide to learn to drive, like most things these day’s, they want it (their licence to drive) like, yesterday! There may be a lot of reasons for someone wanting to pass the driving test quickly; a new job, going abroad, during college/university holidays etc. These are known as Driving Crash Courses (Intensive Driving Courses).

So, what is a driving crash course?

Everyone is different so the number of hours practice required to obtain the required standard for the UK test will vary from one person to another. In my experience, the training hours required for the average candidate varied between twenty five to thirty five. Obviously, some people will do this quicker and others may take longer. Much depends on any previous road experience (had driving lessons before, driven a moped), their level of spatial awareness (the ability to judge distance, speed and angles) and any personal practice in their own car they take. Some people take to driving like a duck to water, others do not!

Intensive driving courses are simply having that number of hours of driving lessons in a quicker period. That could be over a few day’s a few weeks or longer. “Great! My driving licence in a week!” – not necessarily so. If you try and get say, forty hours of training done in 7 day’s, the week will be very intense and possibly stressful for you. Now, some people can cope with this and others not. If you are someone that may struggle with that speed of learning and stress, then you may not be ready for the driving test at the end of that week.

Most people adopt a ‘middle of the road’ approach and have say, 10 hours in a week (2 hours per day). That way, as the training is spread over 4 weeks, they have more time to take in and digest the new information and driving skills they are learning. Still, one month is better than 1 lesson per week over 40 weeks!

What Driving crash courses are not

They are not a ‘magic pill’ to gaining a licence to drive on the public roads. There is no such thing as a guaranteed driving test pass – no one can guarantee that! At the end of the day, it is you and you only that will be taking the test. Errors do happen and nerves may play a part in that. If you see driving schools claiming this, investigate. The guarantee could simply be that if you fail your test, the driving school will provide another driving test at their cost.

If you do need to pass your test quickly, it is best to talk to a number of driver training schools to see what deals they offer and how they relate to you during your exploratory chat. Also, before booking and paying for your driving crash course up-front (most training establishments will require this to confirm such a courses) you would be advised to have a lesson or two from your shortlist to see how you actually get on with them and that their training methods tie in with your style of learning.

The Driving Schools Directory offers an Driving Crash Courses Pupils Enquiry Service that, after you have completed a few basic details, they will contact all the driving instructors in your chosen area and those driver trainers will contact you. This removes a lot of the leg-work for you and makes the process of organising your intensive driving course far easier.