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Safe Y Drivers: A Guide for Parents and Teens | 
enlarge | Author: Phil Berardelli Publisher: Nautilus Communications, Inc. Category: Book
Buy Used: $49.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 821484
Media: Spiral-bound Edition: 3rd Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 174 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.3
ISBN: 0967519160 EAN: 9780967519166 ASIN: 0967519160
Publication Date: July 31, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This is the 10th Anniversary edition of a book that has helped thousands of parents with what may be the most critical task they've ever undertaken - teaching their teenager to drive. Consider just this one fact: In the 27 months between the U.S. military's invasion of Iraq and the elections of that country's first parliamentary government - on Dec. 15, 2005 - about 1,600 American soldiers were killed in combat actions. Ove the same time period, approximately 16,500 teenagers - more than 10 times as many - died on our highways. A death on the road is just as sudden and violent as anything experienced in warfare. Vehicle crashes claim more teen lives than any other cause, and for the youngest drivers, the toll remains the highest. Each day you spend using this book, 20 teens on average will die on our highways. More than 1,500 will be injured, some disabled for life. Teaching your teen to drive may be one of the most challenging things you ever do - and the most rewarding. This book will give you step-by-step, lesson-by-lesson plans to help make your teen a Safe Young Driver.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Excellent resource for concerned parents October 10, 2005 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Our oldest child has his learner's permit, so this is a first for us. We required him to read Mr. Berardelli's book before we took him to test for the learner's permit and we are using it as a blueprint in teaching him to drive. It is very well organized and reminds us to cover small details we might otherwise overlook. We especially like the 100-hour log. Our state only requires 40 hours with a parent while behind the wheel, but we've made it clear we'll be requiring Mr. Berardelli's 100 hours before a license can be obtained. Our metropolitan area lost more than 20 teens last year in traffic accidents, including one from our son's school and the wreck happened right down the street from us at 5:30pm, with no drugs or alcohol involved. Last year's teen record in our area was frightening. This book just gives good, sound advice about preparing a teen to drive.
A few pointers in a haystack of filler July 12, 2005 6 out of 9 found this review helpful
I like the attractive cover and spiral binding, but the content of the book, like cotton candy, melts down to little substance. To pick an example: there are three (3) vacuous paragraphs just on cleaning the windshield, with a canonical list of substances that can dirty the windshield and platitudes like "It doesn't take long before the glass becomes dirty. So it is a good idea, *every* time you start out..." --It's just filler and it's tiresome to read. The book is also poorly written in other ways and needs a good basic editing, the type a grade school English teacher could do.
Give another driver's education book a chance; they're all basically written for teens anyway. My teen and I quickly abandoned this book and practice the Smith System instead. If I were to buy another book I'd try one the time-tested offerings from the well-respected AAA, such as their paperback "Teaching Your Teens to Drive."
Excellent resource February 14, 2005 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
This book is an excellent resource for anyone teaching a teen to drive. It gives specific suggestions and tasks that go beyond the typical training, so that the new driver experiences potential dangers in a controlled environment and practices needed skills. It does take an investment of time on the part of the parent (as well as the teen), but I can think of no better investment you can make than the safety of your teen driver. If you are looking for something to help you structure driving lessons, to make sure you don't overlook something your teen will need to know someday, this is the book you want. I recommend it for anyone teaching someone to drive.
Great dialog tool for you with your teen January 17, 2002 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Berardelli does a great job of coaching parents on 1) how to cope with teaching your teen to drive, and 2) how to engage your teen to see the responsibility and honor having a drivers license really is. My book is a bit tattered. I have 3 teen boys, 2 with licenses. I used his suggestions, particularly the 100-hour lesson log, to negotiate expectations for driving in our family. My husband and I take teaching our kids to drive very seriously. We have not delegated it to the school or a driving instructor. Cars are just too fast, too many drivers are either ignorant of the laws of physics or don't think they apply to them in their cars, and we all just make mistakes on the road. My sons attend a rural, private high school with @160 students. In the past 4 years, 2 teens have died in car crashes. It's the greatest fear I have, not random terrorism. I highly recommend this book as a dialog tool with your teen. I have used it as a "mediator" of sorts, turning to it to stop arguements about driving techniques with my sons. Every high school driving instructor should distribute this book to all their parents!
Never too much November 15, 2001 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Anyone who thinks a few hours of commercial or parental driving instuction is sufficient either does not have kids or lives on another planet. Mr. Berardelli is right on target with this book. I would highly recommend it to parents and commercial driving instructors to pass on to parents. (...) Every teen (and older driver too) could use support and guidance this book gives.
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