Not that long ago my cousin, who was 17, had not went to the driver's facility to get his license even though he had passed driver's ed. and everything else that was necessary to get the license. He just didn't want it - he didn't need it he would say. My whole extended family was sort of shocked by this development, but we wrote it off as just a quirk.
Well, according to today's SF Gate, it might be a trend. In California only 14% of 16 year olds have driver's licenses:
In San Francisco, the school board's two student delegates initiated the effort to drop the graduation requirement.
"We believe driver's education should be more of an option," said
Nestor Reyes, a sophomore at June Jordan School for Equity, adding that
students are carrying full loads to fulfill college entrance
requirements. "Most of them haven't taken driver's education because of
time."
Like the Lowell students, teens nowadays appear to be in no hurry to get behind the wheel of a car.
In 1990, the state pulled the
funding that paid for the driver's training, and almost overnight, the
behind-the-wheel instruction was eliminated.
At the time, 250,000 students in 950 high schools got driver's
training. Last year, only 440 students in seven high schools - mostly
in rural areas - got the training.
The state still requires classroom-based driver's education, but
that law is largely ignored, with only 1 in 4 California high schools
offering the course.