Yes, I imagine that the lessons would have been the valuable thing here.
If about half of people fail, the way I break it down is that the half that past were of a good standard and hopefully this continues into their driving as they continue to learn the ropes. The other half will, I presume, take more lessons to get up to the required standard.
So either way, I still get back to my point that despite all this training and high standard of test we're getting something very wrong and I'm beginning to think training may not be the key to the solution.
The trouble IMHO is that any amount of training, just like passing a test, is at best a snapshot of your ability or at worst simply duping the examiner/trainer into believing that you are good but will wreak havoc just as soon as you're left to your own devices.
To put a different slant on it. I have yearly courses for the same thing each year like: manual handling, customer care, infection control etc. We don't just pass a test and that is it for life.
Maybe I've just answered my own question; yearly assessments rather than a one-off. (Not a repeat of the driving test, I hasten to add)
For myself, I had motorbikes before getting a Reliant. (I
was that plonker). Going from that onto a proper car wasn't very different. I had three lessons and the instructor said he was just taking my money and I should put in for my test.
Passed first time
