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By
JOSEPH TANFANI of the
Miami Herald
Published
Friday, November 3, 2000,
in the Miami Herald
I went to traffic school
naked.
Well, not really, but
the point is I could have:
Florida now has online
traffic schools so you
can correct your bad driving
habits and duck points
on your license without
leaving the comfort of
your home and computer
monitor.
About 5,000 people have
signed up since they opened
for business four months
ago. I became one of them
after I ended up with
a speeding ticket early
one Sunday morning, courtesy
of an alert state trooper
and an unexpected 55-mph
speed zone in Jacksonville.
(OK, I have a heavy foot,
but I swear I didn't see
the sign.)
These days, your traffic
ticket is somebody else's
marketing opportunity:
almost immediately, my
mailbox started filling
up with cards from traffic
schools eager to take
my fee and help make me
a better driver, including
one called the Improv
that says it hires comedians,
presumably to explore
the zanier side of road
rage.
Finally, a yellow card
-- ``You can take traffic
school online, from the
comfort of your home . . .''
Bingo. A winner. I have
never been to traffic
school, but I can't say
I've heard rave reviews
about it. In comparison
to spending a half day
in a motel conference
room somewhere, an online
course seemed a blessing.
Signing up was a piece
of cake. There's an 800
number, and a woman named
Denise answered promptly
and efficiently ran through
the relevant information.
She wrote down my choice
of a user name and password
and then asked 10 personal
and somewhat goofy questions
-- ``What's your favorite
color? Favorite movie?
Have you ever ridden on
a train?'' -- that are
dropped in throughout
the course to make sure
you are actually the same
deviant driver who got
the ticket, or at least
the same one who signed
up for the course.
They tell you the course
will take four hours.
``You can log on and off,''
Denise said. ``You don't
have to sit there for
four hours all at once.''
Sure, I thought. Four
hours! Right. My plan,
of course, was to log
on, skim through the reading,
zip through the test and
get on with my weekend.
Not so fast, leadfoot.
The school makes an honest
effort to ensure you swallow
your traffic school medicine.
After you log on, you're
given seven sections with
a pile of reading in each:
standard stuff about why
you should always wear
your seat belt, and not
drink and drive, or speed,
or drive with bald tires,
or get into your car angry
and drive like a maniac
(not that that's much
of an issue here in South
Florida.)
The time you spend on
each page is logged, and
you can't take the practice
quiz and advance to the
next section until you've
spent the required time,
23 to 55 minutes. (I tried.)
If you try to move on
before your time is up,
you'll be told how much
time you've spent, and
get a reminder to go back
and study some more.
WAIT SOME MORE
Or at least, wait some
more. The timer doesn't
mean they're checking
to make sure your eyeballs
stay glued to the screen
-- at least not all the
time. I did dutifully
read all the material,
honest, but that didn't
take me anywhere near
the amount of required
time.
In my case, the school
didn't seem to mind that
I occasionally played
computer hooky and left
the traffic school window
open while I skipped off
to play Free Cell or get
a sandwich. At one point
I opened another browser
window and shopped for
airline tickets without
any problems.
Robert W. Proechel, who
licenses the online traffic
schools along with some
traditional ones, says
that was just a lucky
break. The school sometimes
pops in one of the personal
questions in the middle
of a section, just to
make sure you're paying
attention, Proechel said.
``If you don't answer
it, guess what, it knocks
you off,'' Proechel said.
To get the traffic school
certificate, you must
pass a test. It's open
book -- they give you
the links to all seven
sections while you're
taking the final -- and
you get three chances
to pass. All the questions
are multiple choice, or
true-false. Not surprisingly,
Proechel says no one has
flunked so far.
On the other hand, it
would be tricky to pass
without some familiarity
with the material. And,
as Proechel points out,
it's at least more rigorous
than the regular version
of traffic school, where
there's no test and everybody
more or less dozes through
it.
``You've got to read
and comprehend to get
to the end,'' said Proechel,
who says he spent seven
months coaxing the state
to sign off on the online
course. ``There were 3.8
million moving violations
last year. Who we're after
is not the ones that have
gone to school but the
ones that don't go.''
PASSING
GRADE
You have to get 32 out
of 40 to pass. I got 37,
and two of the wrong ones
were obvious true-false
questions that I carelessly
misread (partly because
I was preoccupied fending
off inquiries from my
8-year-old son about when
I was going to be off
the computer).
The certificate came
in the mail a few days
later. And, I admit, reading
all those dire statistics
and stern warnings did
make me a more cautious
and less confrontational
driver, at least for two
weeks or so. Now if only
they could force it on
those people who weave
in and out of bumper-to-bumper
traffic on I-95.
-end -
Article From:
Miami Herald
Jospeh Tanfani
http://www.hsmv.state.fl.us/ |
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