Hot_Air wrote: ↑Mon Jul 05, 2021 12:27 pm
@The Spin Doctor Is your teaching representative? Unfortunately, most bike instructors aren’t as good as you (and doubtless others on here).
Well, I think what I taught was pretty standard at Cinque Ports, but then CP had a reputation as being a good - and expensive - training school. CSM - for all their other faults - also had pretty solid standards for instructors. I've still got my CBT training notes - I wrote for myself to act as an aide memoire:
"T junctions are the most popular place to have an accident - and also the place where the accident is least likely to be the rider's fault. Look at the driver waiting to pull out. Look into his eyes. Has he seen you? And if he has, does he know how fast you are going? Will he try to nip out before you get there? Read the road - flying over a crest at high speed so that the driver pulling out has no way of knowing you are there is stupid.
"As you approach a side-junction with a car waiting to pull out, you pass through several zones of possibility. At first you assess the chances of the car pulling out. At this point you still have room to brake. As you get closer, the chances of him seeing you get greater, but the time you have to stop gets smaller. Eventually you get so close you think he can't possibly have missed you, and you're committed anyway because there's no room to brake. Then he pulls out..... The only good thing about cars pulling out is that they usually only do it when there's nothing coming the other way. Don't just realise danger might be there - ACT as if it is. Familiarity does breed contempt - just because nothing has ever pulled out of that driveway before, doesn't mean it won't!"
That was written in 1996, incidentally.
I certainly kept that standard up when we ran B3 in Maidstone, but the two schools I worked for in the interim between leaving CP and getting planning permission on our site in Maidstone were nothing like as good. I did my best, but they were putting trainees on to courses that weren't long enough (presumably to make the sale) and so 'education' played second fiddle to 'drills'.
I did my CBT a couple of times (once in my youth and again a few years later). SMIDSYs weren’t mentioned, let alone how to avoid them, but they are the Most Common Crash. Is there a lesson plan for SMIDSY avoidance in learner training? It's like teaching skydiving without covering when and how to use your reserve parachute
There's no specific lesson plan. SMIDSY isn't in the index of the DVSA's 'Essential Skills'. As I happens, I actually critiqued 'Essential Skills' and its approach to the three standard collisions earlier this year. I talked about the complete lack of advice on junction collisions on my FB page back in January. I wrote:
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The latest edition of the DVSA's 'Essential Skills' book says in the relevant section that a junction "is a point where two or more roads meet. Junctions are hazards where there's a significant risk of an incident occurring. Treat them with care, no matter how easy they look."
That's a pretty good summing-up of the problem, yet riders are continually caught out. Why?
Here's one reason. The section continues by saying we should be looking for "information about the junction ahead, and the level of difficulty".
There follows SEVENTEEN PAGES about how to negotiate junctions...
...which are almost entirely written from the RIDER'S perspective about the 'right way' to ride junctions using the OSM-PSL system (which is - give or take - a slightly modified version of the police system from Roadcraft).
Within those pages, there's remarkably little about what might go wrong at a junction.
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Full article here:
https://facebook.com/SurvivalSkills/pos ... 4634734426
Filtering wasn’t mentioned. Overtaking on rural roads wasn’t mentioned. Counter-steering was hardly mentioned. And why isn’t the ‘limit point’ on the syllabus (it would have helped my cornering considerably)?
As I said, filtering is only likely to get a mention if you're training in a congested area. Overtaking is unlikely to be mentioned because other than passing a bicycle, it's unlikely you'll need to pass anything going much more slowly than you. And in reality, you just use the same OSMPSL system you would for passing a stationary car... but leave yourself longer to get back to your side of the road. The idea is that if you learn the SYSTEM, you can apply it flexibly to other hazards. (Now, where have I heard that before
)
It's always worth pointing out that from the perspective of the school (and trainer), more COULD be covered in the course if there were MORE TIME... but as we've seen not everyone can be persuaded that training beneficial and who resent having to pay for it.