News
and Updates
Independent
driving explained
From
4 October 2010 your practical driving test will include a section
of 'independent driving'. In the independent driving section of your
test, you will drive for about 10 minutes without step-by-step direction
from your examiner.
At
present, examiners give candidates step-by-step instructions during
the test. For other parts of the test, this will still be true. But
during the independent driving section of the test, the examiner will
ask you to drive by either following a series of directions, following
traffic signs, or a combination of both.
To
help you understand where you're going, the examiner may show you a
diagram. It doesn't matter if you don't remember every direction, or
if you go the wrong way - that can happen to the most experienced drivers.
Independent driving is not a test of your orientation and navigation
skills.
Driving
independently means making your own decisions - this includes deciding
when it's safe and appropriate to ask for confirmation about where you're
going.
The independent driving route
If
you ask for a reminder of the directions, the examiner will confirm
them to you.
If
you go off the independent driving route it won't affect the result
of your test unless you commit a driving fault. If you go off the route
or take a wrong turning, the examiner will help you to get back on the
route and continue with the independent driving.
If
there are poor or obscured traffic signs, the examiner will give you
directions until you can see the next traffic sign - you won't need
to have a detailed knowledge of the area.
You
can't use a sat nav for independent driving as it gives you turn-by-turn
prompts. Independent driving tests how you make your own decisions.
Test routes will no longer be published
To
help make the driving test more representative of real driving, the
Driving Standards Agency (DSA) will no longer publish details of test
routes. Currently, test routes used by each driving test centre are
published online; this will stop when the DSA introduces new routes
at the beginning of October 2010.
This
change is being made to support the introduction of independent driving.
The point is to allow you to demonstrate your ability to drive safely
in realistic driving situations, rather than memorising a particular
test route.
Information source - www.dsa.gov.uk
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