MaryPoppins;37020118 said:I have a teen too! He is my first to teach to drive ... and it is A LOT harder than I thought! I am a teacher too ... and this has been a very hard teaching/learning experience for him and me (he seems to do OK with dad - figures!) I think the thoughts of how much can go wrong within one split second of a decision makes me a nervous wreck! Why can't they stay little?

I'd feel better about it if she were a better driver. She hasn't got her confidence yet so she seems "shaky", although she says shes not nervous. My DS23 was sooooo much better at this point than she is. DD doesn't know what she doesn't know. We live in the suburbs of Atlanta and I've had her driving on I-75 & I-285 lately. First thing I discoverd is she doesn't know how to read the big green signs!
So we're working on that, and a whole bunch of other stuff, too. I can't send her off to college in another year if she can't find her way back home!
DD16 is taking a drivers education course in July before we will allow her to get her permanent license. Quite honestly, it is more of an excuse than anything. I nearly have a full blown panic attack when I think about her driving on her own. I keep wondering how she is going make it without me along to tell her what to do every step of the way. I can't seem to get her to understand that she has to be aware of EVERYTHING around her when driving...The person in front of her, behind her, on either side, people pulling out of side streets, out of shopping centers, bikers, pedestrians, etc... She seems to have tunnel vision when she is driving. Then again, I wonder if I am making it out to be worse than it is to keep an excuse for her not getting her license quite yet. I am so unprepared for this!!!
My dd was a quick learner and she is a very good driver. However I took my son around the block and this is all I have to say. 



Can you tell how frustrated I am!I can't seem to get her to understand that she has to be aware of EVERYTHING around her when driving...The person in front of her, behind her, on either side, people pulling out of side streets, out of shopping centers, bikers, pedestrians, etc... She seems to have tunnel vision when she is driving.
I thought I really had it going on when I got my license, although looking back on it I just didn't know what I didn't know. All it took was one low speed rear end collision in 1974 to change my ways. The accident wasn't my fault, technically, because the guy in front of me didn't have any brake lights, but I think had I not been following him closely and thinking about everything else but driving I *might* have been able to avoid hitting him, or at least not hit him so hard it totaled my car.
After that little incident I became a MUCH better driver. That was my one and only car wreck.I'm in the same boat. DD & Dh are on there way home now from practicing. She takes the test first thing tomorrow morning![]()

There is no street parking by our high school. NONE. And, we live 9 miles away from the school.Good luck to her! Tell her to just relax, and try not to be nervous!!!My DD got her license 2 months agoI think I was more excited than she was that she passed.
I have LOVED, really LOVED my DD having her license. I hope that she gets a parking permit for high school next year.There is no street parking by our high school. NONE. And, we live 9 miles away from the school.
