<?php include 'header.php'; ?> <div class="left"> <h1 id="keep_article">Keep Looking</h1> <div class="feedback"> <?php include 'check_answer.php'; quiz_check(13, 15); ?> </div> <h3>Stage 1: No Zombies!!</h3> <p> Fatigue, impairment, or even a wandering mind as a result of boredom can render us into zombie mode. We can all agree that a typical shuffle-and-moan zombie would make a horrible driver. What helps me to avoid this syndrome is to actively go over defensive driving techniques in my mind when I find my thoughts straying too deeply. </p> <p> We should always keep looking, not letting our focus settle in any one place for more than two seconds. Intersections are the single location that have the most accidents, so it is especially important to keep looking here. Scanning before entering an intersection left, right, and then left again is crucial, whether from a stopped start or as we roll toward one.
<?php include 'header.php'; ?> <div class="left"> <h1 id="com_article">Communicate</h1> <div class="feedback"> <?php include 'check_answer.php'; quiz_check(0, 3); ?> </div> <h3>Stage 1: We Don't Have Antennas</h3> <p> Responsible communication not only includes properly using the lights and signals of our vehicles, but utilizing eye contact, hand signals, and visibility techniques for low profile motorcycles, mopeds, and bicycles. The horn is probably the most misused communication device in our current vehicles. Often it is an after-the-fact, long, punitive honk; an expression of road rage. It is more valuable as a preventative tool. Covering the horn with our hand, and using short attention-grabbing honks when you really think someone <em>needs</em> to see you is a polite and valid way to say "Hey, look at me, I'm right here!". Never assume that someone sees you. </p> <p> A good source for reviewing this skill is here: <cite>"<a href="http://www.imakenews.com/kengarffinternal/e_article001731514.cfm?x=b11,0,w">"Key 5: Make Sure They See You" - The Garff Gazette</a></cite> </p>
<?php include 'header.php'; ?> <div class="left"> <h1 id="foll_article">Following Distance</h1> <div class="feedback"> <?php include 'check_answer.php'; quiz_check(7, 9); ?> </div> <h3>Stage 1: Humans Need Help With This One</h3> <p> One does not have to travel far in a car to notice that proper following distance is something that humans really need help with. Googling <a href="https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&gl=us&tbm=nws&authuser=0&q=car+pileup&oq=car+pileup&gs_l=news">"car pile up"</a> shows what might be the result of poor following distance. </p> <p> I remember in my driver's education class, the teacher had a braking reaction time simulator. We all took turns testing our reaction time. It was a fun game, but about as useful as those punching bag arcade games that test how powerful your punch is. Guiding a vehicle weighing 4,000 lbs or more around town is not a game, although it seems many if not most vehicles consider it to be so given the tightly-bound car packs you will see traveling around town or on the highways. </p> <p>
<?php include 'header.php'; ?> <div class="left"> <h1 id="dist_article">Distraction</h1> <div class="feedback"> <?php include 'check_answer.php'; quiz_check(4, 6); ?> </div> <h3>Stage 1: Cell Phones, Cell Phones, Cell Phones and Other Traditional Distractions</h3> <p> The goal with distractions <em>must</em> always be to not make excuses for allowing them into the driver's seat. It would be a very unusually disciplined driver that didn't have room for improvement here. If we honestly apply three standards to potential behaviors, we will have our answer as to whether or not it is a distraction. <ul class="dist_list"> <li><strong>Visual</strong><span class="dist"><i class="fa fa-eye fa-2x"></i></span></li> <li><strong>Manual</strong><span class="dist"><i class="fa fa-hand-paper-o fa-2x"></i></span></li> <li><strong>Cognitive</strong><span class="dist"><i class="fa fa-cogs fa-2x"></i></span></li> </ul> Cell phones obviously are the primary culprit here, and usually will be all three types of distraction. Behaviors need not be all three to be dangerous distractions however. Any one in and of itself can be unsafe. An LED state highway