Drivers Ed 2025 Round 2
Questions to be answered in your essay/application
- What is the importance of driver education in reducing the number deaths as a result of driving?
- What steps can be taken to reduce the number of deaths related to driving?
- Have you ever had an experience of being in car accident or have seen your friends or family members driving irresponsibly?
- What steps can you take to be a better and safer driver as well as help others become safer on the road?
2025 Drivers Ed Contest
Apply for the 2025 Drivers Ed Online Contest Round 2
Essay Submissions
by Tanannum Azad Arufa

This essay is an invitation to readers to pause and reflect on how many headlines about teen car crashes they have scrolled past today and how many truly made them reconsider their own actions behind the wheel. I explore the real and preventable risks that teen drivers face here through personal loss, statistics, and a call for accountability. I also reflect on the tragic loss of a classmate who died as a result of reckless driving and talk about how inexperience makes teen drivers so vulnerable on the road. My essay further emphasizes the importance of drivers' education, community, and family in making roads safer. I aim to push for real reform beginning with mandatory driver education and extending to everyday decisions, and remind us all that behind every crash is a life cut short. And that we owe it to them to finally ask ourselves, how many more headlines before we change?
by Maya Christiansen Wright

The issue of teen driver safety exists beyond personal concerns because it impacts entire families and educational institutions and local communities. Teenagers face car crashes as a major cause of death throughout the United States. Every day families experience devastating accidents which could have been avoided through better awareness education and support programs. Teenagers who begin driving need proper support to handle their distinctive driving dangers and receive essential tools that will help them make safe choices on the road. The Role of Driver’s Education The foundation of teen driver safety depends on proper completion of driver’s education. The program delivers essential knowledge and operating skills needed for youth to handle vehicles with responsibility. The most effective driver education programs focus on teaching students how to make proper judgments while driving defensively and how to address emergency situations. Through driver’s education young people learn essential driving skills in a structured environment that helps them develop confidence. Not every state requires standardized driver's education programs to teach new drivers. Some states dropped their requirement for formal education to focus on basic instruction followed by a road test. The lack of proper training and safe practice opportunities endangers new drivers who lack seasoned adult guidance or vehicles for their learning process. To improve safety outcomes it is essential that the United States should establish standardized requirements for driver’s education programs nationwide. The combination of classroom instruction with actual driving experience within complete training programs develops new drivers who possess both knowledge and practical skills. Challenges Facing Teen Drivers Modern teenage drivers encounter distinct risks that previous generations did not encounter. Three key difficulties that teen drivers encounter include being distracted while d
by Liutciia Galeeva Laboy

The essay discusses why teen driver safety is a serious public issue due to inexperience and risky behaviors. It highlights the important role of driver’s education in teaching safe habits and building confidence. Challenges like distractions, peer pressure, and young drivers’ brain development are explored. The essay also shares a personal experience to show why awareness matters. Finally, it suggests actions teens, schools, and communities can take to promote safer driving.
by Taylor Jacquelyn Reece Cowling

This essay explores why teen driver safety should be taken more seriously in the U.S. I talk about the high number of teen car crash deaths, share my personal experience with a serious accident and share some initiatives I have started to participate in. In the essay there are suggestions for ways schools, communities, and teens themselves can help prevent more lives from being lost.
by Ryoma Ikeda

This essay explores the idea on what it really takes to keep teen drivers safe—not just rules or classes, but real conversations, personal mistakes, and the little choices people make every day. I talk about things like distractions, peer pressure, and how the way we respond to those moments can actually stick with us. It’s based on what I’ve seen, what I’ve learned, and how I think we can all do better—together.
by Malissa Bradford

In this essay I emphasize that teen driver safety is a critical public issue due to the high risks posed by inexperience, distractions, and peer pressure. I share my personal story of a life-changing crash caused by a momentary distraction, which left me injured, homeless, and deeply aware of the dangers of unsafe driving. Despite the hardships, I remained focused on my education and used the experience to advocate for responsible driving habits. I showcase how important comprehensive driver’s education, peer mentorship, defensive driving, and community support to help teens develop safe habits truly are. That the consequences of unsafe driving extend beyond the driver, impacting families and communities, and I believe that education (not trauma) should be the path to learning critical safety lessons.
by Belen Martinez

This essay is deeply personal. After my parents were nearly killed in a car crash, I realized how fragile life is behind the wheel. I wrote this to reflect on what that experience taught me about teen driver safety, and how we, as young people, can take real steps to protect ourselves and each other every time we’re on the road.
by Catherine Rees

This essay explores the importance of teen driver safety and the critical role that education plays in promoting responsible driving habits. Drawing from personal experiences growing up in New Jersey—where strict licensing laws and mandatory driver's education are in place—and comparing them to more relaxed systems in Ohio, the essay highlights the unique challenges teen drivers face, including distractions, peer pressure, and inexperience. It also offers practical suggestions for how teens, schools, and communities can work together to create safer roads for everyone.
by Caesar Jimenez Vergara

explores my experience and the need to raise concern for teens safety
by Mason F Alleyne
An essay about the observations, benefits, practical applications and tips regarding safe driving habits for young people.
by Katlynn Williams

This essay uses a creative allegory to explore teen driver safety, drawing from personal experience and real challenges like distraction and peer pressure. It highlights the importance of driver’s education and calls for schools and communities to promote a culture of safe driving.
by Sebastian Ronquillo

Address the importance of road safety education for young people, emphasizing their need to gain experience and social influence. It explains how education can prevent accidents and improve responsibility. It also presents my personal experience with my family regarding the positive development of a novice driver. Finally, it presents actions to foster a better culture.
by Dylan Colbert

Teen Safety is one of the most dangerous aspects of young kids growing up. The importance of driver safety and correct driving habits can be the difference between a positive or negative driving experience and the effect it has on someones life.
by Evan Adair

My essay explores the central role Driver's Education plays in creating mature, safety-aware drivers. Drawing from personal experiences—such as navigating dangerous road conditions during Florida storms—as I reflect on how Driver's Ed fosters maturity, readiness, and respect for road regulations, rendering them a wiser and capable driver themselves.
by Skylar Elizabeth Ford
This essay explores the importance of teen driver safety through the eyes of a high school student who experienced the tragic loss of friends in a car crash caused by distracted driving. It discusses the role of driver's education and the challenges teen drivers face, such as peer pressure and inexperience. It offers specific actions teens, schools, and communities can take to promote safer driving habits.
by Skylar Turk

This essay shares the deeply personal story of loosing my grandfather to a distracted driver, which completely devastated the lives of all his friends and family. His death not only changed my life forever but also opened my eyes to the devastating consequences of distracted driving. I share this story to honor his memory and advocate for safer, less distracted driving.
by Daniel Davis

A story that rocked me to my core and made me understand and respect the power of an automobile
by Elijah Wasson

This essay is about safe driving as a teenager. I related this to my diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes.
by Giselle Gonzalez
BEing catious on the road will decaease the incidents on thee road, casuign death rate to hopefully decrease with it too.
by Sydney Nickson

As a society, we have become sidetracked. We are constantly shifting our focus to anything that presents itself.
by Sandra Mays

This essay discusses the importance of teen driver safety, the role of driver’s education, common challenges teen drivers face—such as distractions and peer pressure—and offers solutions for promoting safer driving habits through schools, communities, and personal responsibility. It includes a personal experience to highlight the real-life impact of safe driving choices.
by Chad Parker

An essay on the perils of teenage drivers and how and why reform must be taken in multiple facets to better equip them with safe driving practices.
by Elena Govoni

This essay explains why teen driver safety is so important and how driver’s education can help prevent accidents. I share a personal story about how I crashed into a guardrail the first time I drove, and how that scary experience helped me become a better and more careful driver. I also talk about common dangers like distractions and peer pressure, and suggest ways that teens, schools, and communities can work together to make driving safer for everyone.
by Payton Shaw

This is an essay that reviews the life-and-death importance of teen driver safety through personal experience, such as losing close friends in a fatal car accident. It reviews the problems teen drivers are confronting today- distractions, peer pressure, and lack of experience—and highlights the important role driver's education plays in learning responsible skills. The essay also offers practical measures that teens, schools, and communities can take to improve driving safety and prevent future tragedies.
by Bruce Wright

While teen driver safety is a relevant issue year-round, distractions, peer pressure, and inexperience increase risks when it comes to this vulnerable age group. Thus, improving knowledge and awareness of safe driving practices via education, responsibility and community commitment benefits this population in cultivating positive behaviors that reduce risks and keep themselves and fellow motorists safe.
by Andrew Matos Pagan

This essay explores the real-life challenges teen drivers face, including distractions, peer pressure, and inexperience. It highlights the importance of strong driver’s education and personal responsibility behind the wheel, sharing firsthand experiences and practical steps communities can take to make roads safer for young drivers.
by Jaden G Colbert
This essay talks about why teen driver safety really matters and how driver’s ed can help make a big difference. It also goes into the things that make driving hard for teens, like distractions, pressure from friends, and just not having much experience. I include a personal story to show why safe driving is important, and I finish with some ideas on what teens, schools, and communities can do to help young people drive more safely.
by Rayvin Denise Johnson

This personal story links to teen driver safety as a public health concern, the potential to save lives through complete driver education. It reviews current threats: distraction (cell phone), peer pressure, and inexperience, with data and a graphic account of one of our classmate's accident. The author calls for a community response—peer-to-peer education, virtual reality simulation training, more demanding licensure, and role-model parents—to build a culture of responsibility. Mixing research, introspection, and call to action, the article argues that safe driving is not so much a skill as it is a mindset that prioritizes life over ego.