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Learner plate Welcome to the B.A.D.D.I.A blog page for all our latest news and information
Filed under: Driving Tests, learner drivers — John @ 6:19 pm

Book your theory and practical tests online

The quickest and easiest way to book your car or motorcycle driving test is to use the Driving Standards Agency (DSA) online booking service.

You can:

  • choose your test centre
  • choose the time and date of your test
  • check your test appointment details
  • change or cancel your test if your circumstances change

As a new user, you may find it helpful to read the information pages before using this online service.

If you have used this booking service before and are a confident user please continue using the direct links below.

Theory tests

Practical tests

Source: Direct Gov website, Crown Copyright

Comments please from driving instructors and driving schools who are BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) members giving driving lessons, Pass Plus, advanced lessons, automatic  lessons, disabled lessons, towing lessons, refresher courses, motorway lessons, fleet training in preparation for driving tests or driver improvement in the Bedford area.


Filed under: Driving Instructors, Driving Tests, learner drivers — John @ 10:06 am

Pass Plus is a training course specifically aimed at new drivers.

Statistics show that new drivers are more likely to have an accident in the first two years of passing their test due to a lack of driving experience - this is where Pass Plus comes in! The course aims to build upon your newly acquired driving skills and knowledge.

What is Pass Plus?

Pass Plus is a training course specifically aimed at new drivers, designed by the Driving Standards Agency (DSA) with the help of insurers and the driving instruction industry. Pass Plus will build upon your existing skills and knowledge, it will teach you how to anticipate, plan for and deal with all kinds of hazards, and can help you to become more confident on the roads

Pass Plus is made up of six practical modules which include:

Anyone who holds a full UK licence is eligible to take part in the scheme. You will not have to take a test at the end of the course but you will be continually assessed. You must successfully complete all the modules in the course to an achieved or exceeded standard.

How much does Pass Plus cost?

Fees for the Pass Plus course will vary depending on where you live and the instructor or driving school you choose. You should bear in mind that the course will take a minimum of six hours, if more sessions are needed for you to successfully complete the course, this may add to the cost.

When you have successfully completed the course, you are advised to check available discounts offered by the insurance companies taking part in the scheme. The amount you save will depend on the company you choose, you may even save more than you paid for the course.

For more information about Pass Plus please visit the Pass Plus website.

Source: The Direct Gov website 25/04/08, Crown Copyright

Comments please from driving instructors and driving schools who are BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) members giving driving lessons, Pass Plus, advanced lessons, automatic  lessons, disabled lessons, towing lessons, refresher courses, motorway lessons, fleet training in preparation for driving tests or driver improvement in the Bedford area.


If you are paying someone to teach you to drive, they must be approved and registered with the Driving Standards Agency (DSA).

Only a registered approved driving instructor (ADI) can charge money for teaching you to drive.

Recent surveys indicate that nine in ten learners who passed both theory and practical tests first time were taught by an instructor. A fully qualified approved driving instructor (ADI) must display a green certificate on the windscreen of the car while teaching you. Some trainee driving instructors are granted a licence so they can gain experience before their qualifying examination. In this case, the trainee driving instructor must display a pink certificate on the windscreen.

DSA is responsible for maintaining and checking the standards of all approved driving instructors (ADI), who to qualify must:

You should take advice from your ADI on:

DSA, as a government agency, is not allowed to recommend an instructor. We suggest that you ask friends and relatives to recommend someone they know. You could also look in a local business directory for ADIs in your area. Try and choose an instructor who:

Choosing a certified motorcycle instructor

All learner motorcycle and learner moped riders must complete a compulsory basic training (CBT) course before riding on the road.

Only instructors certified by the Driving Standards Agency can teach CBT at an approved training body (ATB). ATBs must have instructors who have successfully completed a two day assessment and have sites approved by DSA for off-road training.

Source: Direct Government website 22/04/08, Crown Copyright

Comments please from driving instructors or driving schools who are members of BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) giving driving lessons, Pass Plus, automatic lessons, refresher training, fleet training, motorway lessons, towing lessons, advanced lessons, disabled lessons to learner drivers and experienced drivers in training for practical tests in the Bedford area.

The two day CBT assessments for potential motorcycle instructors are carried out from the DSA Training and Development Centre at Cardington, near Bedford.


Filed under: News, Other — John @ 5:14 pm

Speeding motorists will be allowed to avoid fines and points on their driving licence by choosing to undergo a “speed awareness course” under new police rules.

Usually, drivers face a £60 fine and three points on their licence.

The course, costing between £70 and £120, will involve classroom lessons giving tips on how to stick to the speed limit, such as saying 30mph out loud when passing a sign. Motorists will also be given driving simulator tuition where they will learn how to judge speed and spot hazards.

The option would apply to drivers who had been caught committing “marginal” speeding transgressions. In a 30mph limit, it would apply to those travelling between 35mph and 39mph.

It will be introduced in all 43 police areas over the next year.

Cathy Keeler, the head of campaigns at road safety charity Brake, welcomed the idea of awareness courses. But she said: “Penalty points should not be negotiable - the points system already allows a driver to get away with multiple offences before losing their licence.

“Speed awareness courses, fixed penalty points and fines must not be brought as an alternative to more serious charges, such as dangerous driving, when an offender has taken a blatant gamble with lives.”

The new rules are unlikely to apply in areas where speed limits are higher and the offer will only be made to a motorist once in a three-year period.

Police will retain the right to prosecute - even in a 30mph zone - if there are aggravating factors, such as breaking the speed limit near a school.

More than 1.7 million speeding offences were caught on camera in 2005, latest official figures show.

Given that some drivers may have committed more than one offence, about a million motorists a year get points on their licence, say road safety experts. A sizeable proportion pick up points for speeding in urban areas and it is this group that is most likely to be given the option of going “back to school”.

The Government is backing the scheme.

Despite insisting that the speed camera programme has saved lives, ministers are aware of its unpopularity with voters.

The scheme, entitled the National Speed Awareness Course, is already offered by some forces including Devon and Cornwall, Hertfordshire, Kent, Leicestershire, Norfolk and Warwickshire.

The AA said: “We are obviously pleased to see the national network of speed awareness courses completed. It means all marginal first-time speeders will be able to take a course and avoid penalty points.

“It also means that this option will be open to all drivers who commit offences away from their home areas to take courses near home.”

But the Association of British Drivers said: “If these courses teach people to drive properly then they are a good idea.

“But if they just tell people to keep their eyes fixed on a speedometer and obsess about a number, then they are stupid.

Driving safely is not just about sticking to the speed limit.”

The use of the courses is the latest in a series of measures which attempt to convince drivers that cameras are neither a “stealth tax” nor part of a Government “war on the motorist”.

Source: The Telegraph website 18/04/08 By David Millward, Transport Editor

Comments please from driving instructors and driving schools who are members of BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) giving driving lessons, automatic lessons, Pass Plusmotorway lessons and refresher courses to learner drivers and other drivers in the Bedford area often in preparation for the driving test.


Filed under: News, Older Drivers, Other, Young Drivers, learner drivers — John @ 5:52 pm

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The largest road safety research project ever launched in Europe will usher in a series of powerful road-safety systems for European cars.

But, in the long term, its basic, experimental research could lead to a car that is virtually uncrashable.

A truck exits suddenly from a side road, directly into your lane only dozens of metres ahead. Suddenly, your car issues a warning, starts applying the brakes and attempts to take evasive action. Realising impact is unavoidable; in-car safety systems pre-tension the safety belts and arm the airbag, timing its release to the second before impact.

Such is the promise of the uncrashable car, coming to a dealer near you in the perhaps not-too-distant future. The system is part of the basic research undertaken by the largest research initiative into road safety ever undertaken in Europe.

PReVENT has a budget of over €50 million and 56 partners pursuing a broad, but highly complementary programme of research. A dozen sub-projects focus on specific road-safety issues, but all projects support and feed into each other in some way.

PReVENT is studying relatively cheap, even simple, technologies – such as parking sensors and existing satellite navigation – that can be retooled to enhance driver safety. But as part of its broad and deep approach to car safety, it is also diving into more experimental and medium- to long-term systems, innovations that could appear in five-to-ten years.

The uncrashable car is a theoretical construct that concerned a handful of PReVENT’s sub-projects. But it could become far more of a reality than anyone expected.

Of course, it is impossible to stop all car collisions, but the technology could be pushed to make it increasingly unlikely and mitigate crashes when they do occur.

For example, PReVENT project WILLWARN uses wireless communication with other vehicles to alert the driver about potentially dangerous situations ahead, while MAPS&ADAS reads sat-nav maps to track approaching hazards, like bends, dips or intersections. SASPENCE looks at safe driving distances and speed, while LATERALSAFE finally brings active sensing to the blind spot.

All have their role in the uncrashable car, as do many others within the broader project. But two projects, APALACI and COMPOSE, take this a step further, actively tracking the speed and trajectories of surrounding vehicles and other road users in real time. If one vehicle suddenly stops, or a pedestrian suddenly steps onto the road, they swing into action to rapidly calculate the implications.

Predictive collision detection

APALACI is an advanced pre-crash mitigation system built round the registration of other motorists and cyclists. In the APALACI system, sensors monitor the street or road immediately around the vehicle and collect as much information about a collision as possible, before it even starts to take place.

The system uses this data to decide on the ideal safety reaction strategy. Examples include controlled braking manoeuvres, controlled activation of the occupant restraint systems or pre-arming airbag systems. The car can react far faster than the driver, cutting speed by crucial amounts to ensure unavoidable accidents are less severe.

APALACI also developed a so-called ‘Start Inhibit System’ for trucks. It surveys the blind spot immediately in front of a truck and protects pedestrians or cyclists by preventing dangerous manoeuvres.

APALACI was tested in a series of vehicles like the Fiat Stilo, the Volvo FH12 truck, the Alfa Romeo 156 and Mercedes E350. It used laser sensors, radar, software decision assistance and a variety of other technologies to achieve the goal.

Tiny changes have a huge impact

COMPOSE, on the other hand, aims more specifically to keep others, as well as its driver, safe. It can apply the brakes if a pedestrian steps onto the road, or extend the bumper, and raise the bonnet to enhance occupant protection.

Tiny differences have a huge impact on car safety. Dropping speed by 1km/h can reduce accidents with injury by 3 per cent, while braking fractions of a second sooner is enough to reduce the damage caused dramatically.

The systems were tested in the BMW 545i and the Volvo FH12 truck, and they do appreciably enhance safety. But, for all their potential, these systems remain, for now, the preserve of the future.

“The teams developed sophisticated algorithms to track all these elements in the landscape,” explains Matthias Schulze, coordinator of the EU-funded PReVENT project and Senior Manager for ITS & Services at Daimler AG. “But they require enormous computer power to keep track of all the various elements, so this work is aimed at basic research, establishing how it could be done. It will be a while before in-car computers are sophisticated enough to use these systems.”

Nonetheless, they do provide tools that automakers can use to mitigate the potential for accidents, and they provide a clear research roadmap for the uncrashable car of the future.

Source: Science Daily website 14/04/08

Comments please from driving instructors and driving schools who are members of BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) giving driving lessons, Pass Plus, automatic lessons, refresher courses, motorway lessons in the Bedford area to learner drivers preparing for the driving test and other drivers.

Q. What is the only car designed to crash?

A. A bumper car!


Filed under: Bedford, Driving Instructors, News, Other, learner drivers — John @ 6:48 pm

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Driving instructors in Northampton have been warned to keep their belongings close to them in the car after two jackets were stolen from the back seat of vehicles in the space of two weeks.

 

Both incidents occurred in Kings Heath, one on March 27 and one on Monday, after youths broke into the back of the car while the instructor was carrying out a lesson with a learner in a car park in Nene Way.

A police spokesman said the two thefts were similar but were not currently being linked.

Bernadette Carter, a driving instructor for Megadrive, based in Northampton, said a notice had been put up at the Driving Test Centre in the town warning instructors of the thefts.

She said: “We have seen that it has happened to one or two driving instructors now and we have told all our instructors to keep their bags down by their feet.

“It is a shame. I have had people try to open the doors of the car when I am in a lesson and we try not to go to certain places at certain times, especially at night.”

Source: Northampton Chron & Echo website 10/04/08

Has any driving instructor or driving school, who is a member of BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) giving driving lessons in Bedford in preparation for the driving test, had similar problems in the Bedford area?


Filed under: Bedford, News, Older Drivers, Other, Young Drivers, learner drivers — John @ 11:40 am

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Too many road signs could be making driving more dangerous, according to a new study.

Psychologists said that the amount of advertising and signage typically present in a city centre could be pushing up the number of accidents.

Oliver Clark, of the University of Hull, investigated the effect of visual distractions on drivers, using a 3D driving simulator.

In the experiment the volunteers had to control a crosshair in the centre of the screen and respond, via a pedal, to road signs asking them to slow down or give way to traffic.

Meanwhile, they were distracted by objects such as advertising hoardings and petrol station signs at the edges of the screen. He asked 54 volunteers to take turns through four levels of distraction: “no load” involved no distractions, “low load” three distractions, “high load” six, and “overload” nine.

The results showed an increase in reaction time of 100 milliseconds between “no load” and “overload”, equivalent to around an extra metre and a half in stopping distance. Clark said the overload condition was equivalent to a busy city centre. “This experiment shows that too much visual information in the form of advertising and signage has an effect on reaction times - the more distractions there are the slower the reaction times of the driver. We should be aware that the plethora of advertising at roadsides and signage may be contributing to road accidents.”

Source: Alok Jha, science correspondent, The Guardian website 06/04/08

Comments please from driving schools and driving instructors, who are members of BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association), giving driving lessons in Bedford to learner drivers preparing for the driving test.


Filed under: Bedford, News, Older Drivers, Other, Young Drivers, learner drivers — John @ 12:06 pm

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Plague of craters and roadworks.

Drivers are plagued by more than 3.5 million holes in our roads, a survey has revealed.

It found there are now a record number of potholes and roadworks across England and Wales.

And it means an average of 53 million was being paid out in compensation claims every year for damage to vehicles or accidents caused by poor roads.

The study by the Asphalt Industry Alliance found some roads faced a 65-year wait for resurfacing.

AA president Edmund King said there had been a 25 per cent increase last year in the number of road holes dug by utility companies.

He said: “This has led to congestion chaos, increased risk of accident, poorer road surfaces and more vehicle emissions.

“We need fewer, shorter and better co-ordinated street works to get us out of this obstacle course.”

Asphalt Industry Alliance chairman Jim Crick said:

“Despite some increase in government funding over recent years, it seems that highways maintenance is still suffering from historically being treated as the Cinderella service.

Roads are a vital asset and our most valuable one.

“We all depend on them every day and it’s time the under-funding of their maintenance was addressed.”

The Transport Department said the government has more than trebled funding to local authorities for road investment since 2002.

Source: The Mirror website 02/04/08, By Bob Roberts, Political Editor

Comments from driving instructors who are members of BADDIA (Bedford and District Driving Instructors Association) giving driving lessons in Bedford please.


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