Anonymous wrote:Girls have to know how to drive themselves home. They just do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don’t understand this generation. There are so many kids that don’t want to get a license….even with uber and public transportation, it must be so limiting to not have the ability to hop into your car and drive to your friend’s house, go to a restaurant, go to your part time job, drive yourself to school, to the mall, to all the places we used to go as teens. No wonder they are so anxious and depressed.
I mean, where do you live? My teens in Arlington walked to friends' houses, walked to Ballston and Clarendon to go to restaurants and coffee shops, took the orange line to Tysons or to Roslyn and walked to Georgetown. It wasn't practical to drive to their jobs in Clarendon because they would have had to pay to park there. They walked to school.
I learned to drive at 16 but in my small town in a rural area, there was little to drive to. No mall nearby. I couldn't drive to school because my parents needed their cars to go to work, so I took the schoolbus. My kids definitely made out better.
NP - knowing how to drive isn't mutually exclusive with using public transportation. There's so much in between close-in Arlington and a small rural town. And another PP had a great point about it being important for women to know how to drive themselves home, it's a particularly important life safety skill for women.
I also don't get it. My kids have plenty of access to public transportation and walking and they will also get their drivers' licenses when eligible. It's not negotiable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don’t understand this generation. There are so many kids that don’t want to get a license….even with uber and public transportation, it must be so limiting to not have the ability to hop into your car and drive to your friend’s house, go to a restaurant, go to your part time job, drive yourself to school, to the mall, to all the places we used to go as teens. No wonder they are so anxious and depressed.
I mean, where do you live? My teens in Arlington walked to friends' houses, walked to Ballston and Clarendon to go to restaurants and coffee shops, took the orange line to Tysons or to Roslyn and walked to Georgetown. It wasn't practical to drive to their jobs in Clarendon because they would have had to pay to park there. They walked to school.
I learned to drive at 16 but in my small town in a rural area, there was little to drive to. No mall nearby. I couldn't drive to school because my parents needed their cars to go to work, so I took the schoolbus. My kids definitely made out better.
Anonymous wrote:You do NOT force it. We don’t want scared/uninterested people driving
Anonymous wrote:You do NOT force it. We don’t want scared/uninterested people driving
Anonymous wrote:Neither of my kids were/are interested, OP. We forced the issue with my oldest during the pandemic, because he had no extra-curriculars to speak of, and we had plenty of time to teach him. He was incredibly anxious about driving, with good reason, since he has inattentive ADHD and poor reflexes. His driving progress was extremely slow, but at last he got his license before graduating from high school.
My second is now newly 16. Unlike her brother, she's incredibly busy. I have no idea when she will have time to learn. She's doing an intensive 8 week internship this summer, preparing for the SAT, and has numerous other commitments as well. Maybe we can sneak in a few hours here and there. I guess I should sign her up for the theoretical portion now.
Since you're started the process already, I think you're locked in, OP. Get her out on a parking lot after AP exams and start slow, see where it goes. It's actually very wise of a teenager to be anxious about driving, it shows they're responsible and thinking of consequences. Please reassure her and teach her at a pace she can follow, no pressure.
Anonymous wrote:You do force it. “You are very busy, and I’m going to want you to be driving yourself to your activities soon” and then have her drive to said activities when you are taking her. Even just 15 m drives will help. In fact familiar routes will build her confidence.
If she really gets difficult about it, start making her bus or get her own rides. The same parents I know who say their kids aren’t interested usually play chauffeur at their kids beck and call. The reason Gen X was motivated to drive was bc out parents weren’t about to drive us around like that. Stop playing uber