In the United States it is well known that adolescence and early adulthood are regarded as negligence and poor driving force compared to the elderly. Amy Best pointed out that young drivers accepted the media's attention not all but the best (660) from the perspective of car accident liability distribution. Although there is concern about the dangers of driving in adolescence, recent research has shown that teenagers generally acquire a driver's license and the driving time will be shorter than before.
Improvements are taking place as young drivers are often discriminated against for driving skills. According to a survey of today's news station, "61% of young people acknowledge dangerous driving habits" ("Teens Risky Driving" 1). Most teenagers think driving is safe, but most teenagers are dangerous to others on the road. The ratio of dangerous young drivers is high, but the results still exist. - Reason for Boys' Suicide: Teen Chaos, Stress, Depression I have direct experiences about juvenile suicide already. Everyone says that the year that you graduated from high school should be the best year or your life. You are one step closer to your dream of freedom, and you will never be together again, so you will have the best time with your friends. It was a year my close friends committed suicide, so the seniors I saw at Wildwood High School were different.
I started driving at the age of 18. I can legally drive but my heart is still a teenager (almost adults, and teenagers). Three years have passed since I drove. In terms of driving, I can clearly distinguish between old and new. I aimed for high speed just for that pleasure. But now I tend to stay safe even if I run fast (140-150 kmph speed). I am aiming for more comfortable passengers, and I am more cautious in the way I am going. I grow from a young driving phase and can say with confidence that I felt better and safer.
Today, parents are concerned not only about their way of driving their teenage son / daughter, but also worrying about what they are doing while driving. Until now, my parents were most concerned about whether children are drunk driving every year. This was the cause of over 2,700 deaths and over 282,000 injuries (Ricks 2013). As a result, drinking and driving have been the main causes of teenage deaths in the past 30 years. However, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of young drivers has decreased by more than 54% since 1991 and 50% of young people in their teen ages 15 to 18 are allowed to drive. SMS (Ricks 2013)