However, I did not allow DS to ride with friends, ever while in High School and I still discourage it now that he is in college. His "good responsible etc" BFF rolled his car within 6 months of being licensed due to excessive speed.
Wow.
My oldest is 20 now. We bought him a car at 16, I had a baby at home and his school was about 40 mins from the house. We only let him drive to school and home.
I am still nervous when he is on the road , I dont think that ever ends. My mom still freaks out when I drive out of town lol.
Same here.
I have two daughters who are drivers, and a DS going on Monday to get his license. With all 3 of them, we let them drive every chance we got...whenever we were in the car, day night and all weather (as long as it wasn't bad snow/torrential rain). I admit...DS was a little slower learning, but he's doing really well now. My mother gave him her car...meaning it will be in our names (it has to be, legally) and it's for him to use, but he will still need to ask to use it and let us know who he'll be with, and where, same as anytime he's out now.
I never did get parents having to drive kids to school, unless they are on their way to work and they want to be sure they get there before they leave the house.
I agree, if there's bus transportation. At the beginning of this year tho, I told DS I'd take him to school because for me, it was a way to get me up and out of the house.
DD could not ride with DS for 1 1/2 years. Freaked me out too much. And then only one way once a week. Distractions! One time DS saw a frog in the car and knew DD would freak out. He knew to pull over before telling her. She freaked and jumped out. Would have caused a wreck had he told her sooner! I still don't like him to give others rides and he is in college. Glad he has a stick shift 2 seater truck!
I'd freak out (definitely) and cause a wreck (possibly) if there was a frog in the car too, and I'm 51.
I also have the experience of having an older child who has been through the driving with friends phase, and I remember what worked for us and what didn't. Giving a teen some limited freedom and still controlling the circumstances worked best for us. A drive down a residential street for ten blocks, one turn at a stoplight, and following a 35 mph speed limit for two miles until arriving at the school parking lot seems to me to be a low risk scenario, and that is what DD15 and her new-driver friend are doing.
I would feel terrified to send a student out in late high school/college without a couple of years of driving under his/her belt. Waiting until she was 17 or 18 would, in my opinion, cause her to miss the most closely supervised period of practice driving.
In RI, to get a permit at 16:
First: You must pass an accredited
thirty-three (33) hour classroom driver education class. (And you have to be at least 15 and 9 months to take the class.)
Second: You must
pass a computerized test administered by the Division of Motor Vehicles.
Then, between 16 1/2 and 18, get a
limited provisional license.
A PERSON WITH A LIMITED PROVISIONAL LICENSE
CANNOT DRIVE BY THEMSELVES BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 1:00AM AND 5:00AM.
With a provisional license in your possession, you can drive a motor vehicle under certain conditions:
With supervision:
1. At any time.
2. A supervising driver must be seated beside you while the vehicle is in motion.
Without supervision in any of the following circumstances:
1. Between 5:00am and 1:00am.
2. When driving to or from work.
3. When driving to or from any activity of a volunteer fire department, volunteer rescue squad, or volunteer emergency medical service if the driver is a member of such organization.
In both cases, everyone in the vehicle must be properly fastened by a safety belt or child restraint system at all times.
During the first twelve (12) months of a limited provisional license no more than one (1) passenger younger than twenty-one (21) years of age is allowed in the vehicle. Immediate family and household members are exempt from this rule.