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21/04/2011
Should I ask my Driving Instructor to come with me on test?
""The choice is yours!""
By: M. Butler
Should I ask my Driving Instructor to come with me on my Driving Test? The choice is
yours. Your instructor does not particularly mind one way or the other.
There are one or two points that you may wish to take into consideration before you make the decision.
Firstly let me make something quite clear......
You have the right to have your instructor present in the back seat on your driving test if you wish
for them to be there. There is a simple procedure to follow......
If you have decided that you would like your instructor to accompany you on test it is considered polite to ask the
examiner if your instructor may accompany you. The best time to ask them is while they are checking your documents.
The examiners do not mind in the slightest.
There is a perfectly good reason for this protocol. It is your test and your choice. Not your instructor’s. The
examiners are simply looking after your interests. By asking the examiner you are indicating your permission for
the instructor to accompany you on test.
So, let us look at the question: “Should I take my instructor with me on my driving test?”
The points for: 1) If I fail, my instructor will have seen the fault and can then give
me a better explanation of what went wrong.
If you are unfortunate enough to fail your driving test then at the end the examiner will provide an oral debrief
of the major faults. Your instructor can listen to this as well (even if they did not accompany you on test) so
they will not miss anything. It is true that if they were actually there in the car at the time of the fault they
can provide you with a more detailed report on what went wrong.
(The examiner's debrief is accurate enough for your instructor to explain to you what went wrong anyway.)
2) I think that it will be to my benefit to have a 'friend' in the car as well as the examiner.
This one is certainly a judgement that only you can make. If you take your instructor in the back then they will be
sitting there willing you on. If you think that having them with you in this capacity is an advantage then go for
it and take them with you.
(Pupils who have taken me on this basis in the past have decided afterwards that the first reason in the 'against'
list is a far more powerful reason to leave me in the test centre.)
3) I want my instructor there to watch the examiner.
There are always rumours that examiners have quotas for passes and that they have to be watched. Colleges in
particular are usually the source of the most amusing of these rumours but if you think that the examiner may be a
problem then, you are wrong, but by all means take your instructor with you.
(I have heard the ramblings of some amusing imaginations on this subject. I will not trouble you with them here but
suffice it to say that if you really want us to watch a fellow professional at work then we will if it will make
you feel better.)
The points against: 1) I do not want two professionals watching me. One is quite
intimidating enough.
Fair enough. Do bear in mind though that they are watching you for different reasons. The examiner is watching you
to see whether you make a mistake that has to be marked on their sheet. Your instructor is there as support for you
and is totally on your side and wishing you well.
2) If I make a small mistake I will be thinking about what my instructor may be thinking.
Don't bother. I can tell you what they will be thinking....”Forget it, you cannot change the past, concentrate on
what comes next! “
3) The additional weight of an extra passenger in the vehicle may affect my clutch control.
This can be a valid point, particularly in tuition vehicles with small engines and large instructors!
(Let your instructor know well before test day if you would like them to accompany you on test, that way you will
be given chance to practice with an extra person on board before the test.)
In summary: At first glance there are three points 'for' and three 'against'. What you
need to do now is to weigh up in your own mind which of these reasons is the most important to you.
My own experience matches that of other instructors that I have spoken to about this subject. Even after being made
aware of the points above, most of my pupils do not want me in the car at test time under any circumstances.
The occasional one who has taken me along has said at the end that if they had failed they would definitely not
have taken me on their next test.
The examiner is daunting enough! The examiner and their instructor together are, apparently, just too
much!
Source: http://www.newhorizonsdrivingschool.co.uk
Professional Driving Tuition and Driving Instructor Training in Barry, Vale of Glamorgan and surrounding areas.
For more information visit www.newhorizonsdrivingschool.co.uk
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