seremify007
Junior Member
Just saw this on the cover of the Daily Telegraph and thought I'd post it up;
All I can say is 'hmmm....'
URL: http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,21592459-5001021,00.htmlRTA dumbs down licence exams
By Heath Aston and Stephanie Wilson
April 21, 2007 12:00
THE State Government will cheat on its own new "tougher" driving test to ensure the same proportion of learner drivers qualify for their P-plates despite the more arduous testing.
The RTA has briefed driving instructors on how it plans to dumb down the enhanced test – and even supply students with the test routes – in a bid to avoid a backlash when pass rates "plummet" under the new system.
The new test was implemented as part of the Iemma Government's tough stance on improving the skills of P-plate drivers in the wake of the death of a number of teenage drivers.
The tweaking of pass marks makes a mockery of the tests, which are due to be introduced within nine months.
A leaked recording of a briefing for 60 driving instructors by RTA driver policy manager Duncan McRae reveals Government fears that the new test will slash the success rate from six in 10 to just three in 10.
"Our worst-case scenario is the pass rate plummets, the media rip into us and say the new test was a crock and we're forced to revert to the old test," Mr McRae said.
Such a high rate of failure is likely to anger drivers and their parents, who either pay for lessons or spend more than 120 hours teaching L-platers.
To avoid the potential stink, Mr McRae outlined how the RTA would dumb down the new test to make it "equally difficult" as the current one.
"If you roll out the 90 per cent pass rate and suddenly everybody fails because you've made it too high, you might actually need to roll it out with say 85 per cent pass rate to be equally tough with the current test and then tweak it back up," he said.
Central Coast driving instructor Mark Baker said he and fellow delegates were gobsmacked when Mr McRae suggested longer test routes could be provided to students in advance.
"What's the point of spending all this time and money to improve the standard of driving when the end result is exactly the same?" he asked.
In January last year, Roads Minister Eric Roozendaal said the new test would be "tougher, particularly focusing on (a driver's) ability to perceive potential dangers".
Opposition roads safety spokesman Andrew Fraser said: "All the fanfare about tougher criteria has gone out the door.
"This was pre-election promises from the Government but politics has no place where children's lives are being lost."
All I can say is 'hmmm....'