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Parent/Teen Vehicle Use Agreement
Parental involvement is a vital part of your child's experience
toward becoming a safe driver. Work together with your
teen to help him or her learn safe driving skills and responsible,
economical vehicle use by following these guidelines. Click here to complete the online
Vehicle Use and Operation Agreement form.
Parent Guidelines - A Partnership for Survival
There are several agreements parents and young drivers can
make to reduce the likelihood of crashes. New drivers
should agree to:
- Limit
night driving.
- Never
use alcohol or drugs before they get behind the wheel
or allow the use of alcohol or other drugs in the vehicle.
- Make
sure that everyone in the vehicle wears seat belts at
all times.
- Restrict
the number of passengers.
- Restrict
high-risk driving situations during the first year behind
the wheel. Examples: adverse weather, congested traffic,
unsupervised long trips.
- Never
drive when excessively fatigued, angry, or upset.
Guidelines for Implementing a Parent-Teen
Vehicle-Use Agreement
1.
Be an Example
- Behavior
is learned, not innate.
- It
is unreasonable to expect your child to behave differently
than you do when driving or caring for a vehicle.
- If
there are preteens in the family, prepare them to take
responsibility as a part of growing up.
2.
Be Clear
- Go
over the contract with your son or daughter.
- Fill
in the blanks where applicable.
- Explain
the regulations.
- Listen
to your child's point of view.
- Link
driving privileges to school performance and overall
behavior.
- Emphasize
consequences of failure to meet contract provisions.
- Emphasize
that you will not accept irresponsible behavior.
3.
Be Positive and Emphasize:
- Your
concern for your child's safety and welfare.
- Your
hopes for your child's future.
- Your
expectations concerning responsible behavior.
- That
driving is a privilege and a reward for responsible behavior.
- Conservation
of family resources as an important need.
4. Be vigilant
Let
your child know that together you and he or she will be inspecting
the following:
- Compliance
with maintenance requirements.
- Tires
for abusive use or adequate pressure.
- Fuel
level and mileage before and after child uses car.
- Vehicle
for damage
- Vehicle
for clues of drinking or other drug abuse.
5.
Be Prompt
- Act
promptly if there is an infraction of the agreement.
- The
longer you wait to impose consequences, the weaker the
link to behavior.
- Delaying
can be perceived as a sign of weakness.
6.
Be Firm, but Gentle
- Let
the contract do the talking.
- Express
disappointment when rules are broken.
- Do
not negotiate consequences for infractions.
- Be
firm. Do not change your mind.
- Let
your anger show, but do not allow it to take over.
- If
your child is not accustomed to obeying regulations to
the letter, he or she may protest loudly when sanctions
are imposed. Do not cave in to the uproar.
7.
Be Consistent
- Discipline
each infraction the same way each time it occurs.
- Both
parents must provide a united front on issues. Do not
allow yourselves to be divided and conquered.
- Your
credibility and the power of the agreement will be weakened
if you are not consistent in your enforcement and application
of consequences.
8.
Be Fair
- Get
all the facts before you take action.
- Inform
your child that other families are also using the parent-teen
agreement and that he or she is not being singled out
as an exception.
9.
Be Flexible
- Zero
flexibility could lead your child to drive at breakneck
speeds to meet deadlines.
- Be
careful not to allow exceptions too frequently, otherwise
your exceptions become the rules, and your agreement
loses its power.
- Beware
of the tradeoff game. You deny the driving privilege
on Friday night, but your child wants to trade for the
following Friday night instead.
- Avoid
the negotiation game in which your child wants to bargain
for extra miles or extra driving time.
10.
Be in Control-Be Alert for Games
- On
strike: "I won't study if you won't let me have the car."
- Nobody
likes me: "This is the only way I can make it with the
group."
- The
tickets are bought: "Now you'll make all of us waste
money."
- Nobody
else can drive: "You're spoiling the fun for all of us."
- The
excuse game: "We ran out of gas." "I had to take everybody
home."
11.
Be Forgiving
- Your
love must be unconditional.
- The
contract provides for withholding privileges, not withholding
love.
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