Rockford Register Star

App could be used to teach teens how to drive

- Jessie Balmert USA TODAY NETWORK – OHIO

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Can an app teach driver’s education? Columbus, Ohio-based Grange Insurance believes so: It is working on an app to help teach teen drivers and point out problemati­c practices. However, current state law requires certified driving instructor­s to teach eight hours of behind-the-wheel training.

In response, Ohio lawmakers introduced bill that would allow student drivers to complete eight hours of incar training with instructio­n from an app.

If it passes, Ohio would be among the first states to allow app-based driver’s education training.

There are some rules: The student driver must also have an eligible adult in the car and must complete 24 hours of classroom training.

The Ohio Director of Public Safety would need to approve any app to ensure it meets the state’s standards for teaching individual­s how to drive.

The app could make driver’s education more accessible to teenagers who live far from a driving school or who can’t afford between $400 and $800 for in-car and classroom instructio­n. Parents could also use the app during the 50 hours of in-car practice student drivers must complete.

“Sometimes a young driver might listen to an app better than a parent,” said Rep. Roy Klopfenste­in, R-Haviland, one of the bill’s sponsors.

But an app isn’t a substitute for a trained driving instructor, said Mike Belcuore, AAA’s manager of driver education and operations.

“I’m not against technology in this,” he said. “I think there’s room for it in driver’s ed and I think there’s room for it in in-car instructio­n. My concern is just throwing an app on an untrained person.”

Instructor­s have cars equipped with a second brake, which allows them to put students in less comfortabl­e scenarios to test their driving skills, Belcuore said.

“An app doesn’t have the ability to stop the car or steer the car.”

Klopfenste­in said there will always be a need for trained driving instructor­s because each student learns differentl­y.

“It is not, in my mind, to replace the licensed driving instructor,” he said. “It’s to aid in getting better drivers, and that’s the bottom line.”

Grange Insurance’s Innovation Officer Jason Wrather said in a statement: “(T)he app is envisioned as a support tool to improve driver training outcomes and safety, and not as a replacemen­t for trained, in-person driver education practices.”

Klopfenste­in also said he’s not concerned that the app would distract parents or student drivers.

“My GPS, I don’t have to look at anymore. It talks to me,” he said. “Young drivers adapt to the electronic­s quicker than older folks.”

What about those underlying problems with accessing driver’s education? Belcuore acknowledg­ed that finding a qualified instructor outside Ohio’s largest cities can be a “real challenge” but he said an app isn’t the only solution.

The bills were introduced earlier this year and await committee hearings. Grange’s Wrather said there is no specific timetable for the app’s launch at this point.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The app could make driver’s education more accessible to teenagers who live far from a driving school or who can’t afford in-car and classroom instructio­n.
GETTY IMAGES The app could make driver’s education more accessible to teenagers who live far from a driving school or who can’t afford in-car and classroom instructio­n.

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