Sat nav using included into Britain's driving test
Xinhua, April 15, 2017 Adjust font size:
Learner drivers in Britain will have to show they can use sat nav devices as part of their official driving tests, the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) announced Saturday.
The test is undergoing one of its biggest changes since its introduction in 1934, with around 1.6 million rookie drivers a year taking the test.
Changes being introduced from Dec. 4 will include learners following directions using a sat nav and testing different manoeuvres.
"The changes are designed to make sure new drivers have the skills they'll need to help them through a lifetime of safe driving," said a spokesman for DVSA.
Government Transport Minister Andrew Jones said: "Britain's roads are among the safest in the world. However, road collisions are the biggest killer of young people. These changes will help us to reduce the number of people killed or seriously injured on our roads and equip new drivers with the skill they need to use our roads safely."
The DVSA's chief executive Gareth Llewellyn said: "It's vital that the driving test keeps up to date with new vehicle technology and the areas where new drivers face the greatest risk once they've passed their test."
The new test will also double to 20 minutes the amount of time spent driving without turn-by-turn directions from the driving examiner, with the whole road test taking an average 40 minutes.
Learners will have to follow a route from a sat nav supplied for the driving test by the examiner.
Two of the features of the test dreaded by many learners, "reversing around a corner" and "turn-in-the-road manoeuvre," commonly known as a "three point turn" will no longer be tested. But DVSA said they should still be taught to learners by driving. Endit