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Advice for Learner Drivers: Reasons to Sack Your Driving Instructor
Posted on November 10th, 2009 by admin, under Advice for Learner Drivers, Driving Instructor, Driving Tips.
Getting your driving license is not an easy ride. While you can self-educate on the theory, it seems unlikely you can play the same trick with your practical driving test. To pass it successfully, you will need to find an approved driving instructor (ADI), and a good one at that. And this is the point where you should be particularly careful about your choice.
Finding an ADI is as easy as pie today. You can simply look into your local paper or surf the web. So you phone around until you think you’ve met a suitable fellow. Not the cheapest, mind you, because undervalued hourly rate will possibly mean a substandard service. Nice chat on the phone doesn’t necessarily mean the guy on the other end is as good at teaching as he is at selling.
The real testing comes during your lessons. Below are five main reasons why you should sack that nice guy before you lose your money and hope to pass your driving test successfully.
Quick Tempered
Is your ADI shouting at you? Is he losing his temper every time you make a minor mistake? If so, don’t be frustrated with yourself. You pay for being trained, and training includes making mistakes. Shouting teacher has never been a good one. You are not going to pay for being shouted at, aren’t you?
Not Enough Driving
How much driving is enough? Don’t expect you get under the wheel right away. At your first lessons, you are going to drive for about half of your lesson time. By approximately hour ten you should be driving all lesson long. If somehow you drive less than that, you are not getting value for your money.
No Feedback
Good ADI always keeps track of his learner’s progress. Getting feedback is crucial for learners so they can get an idea of how well they are doing and what are their weaknesses. It is also crucial for ADI because this helps him focus on a learner’s problems instead of simply completing lesson plans.
Mobile Phone Chatter
If your ADI keeps chatting on that mobile phone all the time, just run away. You are charged an hourly rate so his mobile phone use robs you out of time you pay for. In addition, it interrupts and interferes with learning process, let alone takes your attention off the road.
Taxi, Please
Once you drove your ADI to a shopping centre or a bank. But then you start getting this uncomfortable feeling your ADI is using driving lessons to go about his business. You are doing the driving all right, but as your teacher does his shopping, the paid time is ticking away.