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2025 Driver Education Round 2 – Crash Course: The Importance of Driver’s Education for Teens

Name: Sophia DeOliveira
From: Sugar Land, TX
Votes: 0

Crash Course: The Importance of Driver’s Education for Teens

In 2025, there will be approximately 8.5 million licensed teen drivers in the U.S., aged 16 to 19 years old, representing less than 4% of all licensed drivers. Yet, they comprise 9.1% of all motor vehicle crashes. In 2023, 3,048 teenagers between the ages of 13 and 19 died in a motor vehicle accident, almost 8 deaths each day. Motor vehicles are one of the leading causes of death for teenagers, mostly due to their lack of experience, immaturity, and their desire to participate in risk-taking behaviors like speeding and car racing. Teen driver safety impacts not only teenagers but also their families and the entire community. Deaths from car accidents cause emotional trauma, legal repercussions, and financial stress for families and communities. Driver’s education helps prevent these tragedies by teaching teens safe driving habits and traffic laws, such as reading street signs and maintaining composure on freeways. It also acknowledges teens’ immaturity and lack of experience by offering advice on how to handle unexpected situations, such as changing a flat tire and driving in heavy rain. By identifying common risks, driver’s education helps teens to make safer choices to prevent more deaths and accidents.

Some of the common challenges for teen drivers are distractions, risk-taking behavior, and gaining experience. The main distractions for teenagers are phones, music, and friends. Phones are known to be highly addictive, especially with teenagers, as they spend one out of every five minutes looking at their phones during car trips, often overestimating their ability to multitask while driving. Along with phones, music can also be distracting, and if played too loud, it can block out important sounds or disrupt mental focus. Friends can distract the driver with conversation or pressure them to engage in risky driving behaviors just to show off. Just having 3 or more passengers in the car quadruples the risk of death for teenage drivers. These distractions severely impact a teenager’s ability to drive safely. Another common challenge for teen drivers is risk-taking behaviors, like speeding or street racing. 43% of drivers ages 16 to 18 admit to speeding, and 55% street racing crash victims are teenagers, with 65% of those races being on public roads. Speeding and racing endanger not only teen drivers and passengers, but also innocent motorists driving on the roads. This adrenaline-driven behavior is often posted and glamorized on social media, influencing younger children who will view this behavior as acceptable or even admirable when they start driving. Lastly, the main challenge of teenage drivers is their lack of experience and inability to fully understand how to handle certain situations. Based on personal experience, I was turning right on a two-way street, unfamiliar with the area I was driving in. Instead of turning a sharp right, which would lead me in the correct direction, I accidentally veered wide, meaning I was driving into oncoming traffic. A car started driving straight towards me, and I almost crashed. Instead, I turned a sharp left into another street and narrowly avoided a crash. My lack of experience nearly caused injury to me and another individual. This lack of experience presents a big challenge, especially since teenagers feel they should drive confidently and correctly when licensed, and they are often too afraid to ask for help.

To prevent motor vehicle accidents, teens and communities can both eliminate distractions, increase driving education, and enforce stricter driving consequences for teenagers who participate in reckless driving. To prevent distractions from phones and music, teenagers should pre-set their music or favorite radio station before leaving the driveway. They should enable “Do Not Disturb While Driving” on their phones to decrease distractions from texts, calls, and social media, or place their phone in a place out of reach, such as in the glove box. They should also limit the number of passengers they take in and remember their responsibility to keep themselves and their passengers safe. The community should also increase access to driver’s education for teenagers by incorporating frequent school lessons surrounding the dangers of reckless driving and teaching teenagers how to avoid common mistakes. The community should also address the issue of speeding and street racing, especially in urban and metropolitan areas, and how speeding not only endangers the individual, but also the other drivers and the families affected by the negative consequences of speeding. Lastly, the community should enforce stricter driving penalties for teenagers who violate traffic laws, such as mandatory driving education as part of the sentence, probation, or even suspending licenses for repeat offenders.

Even though teenagers are young and inexperienced, it’s important to remind them that they are driving a dangerous weapon that can significantly injure and kill in just a couple of seconds. Educating the younger generation on the proper way of driving and addressing the common mistakes and challenges of driving as a young teenager can help improve road safety for the general public and prevent emotional and physical trauma in the community.