School Bus Driving Simulator Promotes Safety
We’ve looked in the past at the giant ship simulator at Texas A&M – Galveston, where boat pilots entering the Merchant Marine can train virtually on any ship and all the world’s major ports, and the giant flight simulators used by the FAA to train airline pilots and traffic controllers in Oklahoma. Now comes word of a school bus simulator designed to train new drivers in safe driving.
This is no simple video game trainer. The price tag is a reported $200,000 for schools in Prince William County, VA. Here are the key quotes from an article on a local television station’s site:
Users see a dashboard, identical to those in real school buses. The computer then creates a variety of road hazards drivers can see and feel, such as bad weather.
“It allows them – in a laboratory setting – to make mistakes that don’t cost lives, doesn’t damage property and they get an opportunity to learn from that,” said Director of Transportation Ed Bishop, Prince William County schools.
Eventually, all 725 Prince William school bus drivers will train on the simulator; some to specific needs like backing up or making turns, so they are better drivers when they are out on the road with students on board.
School bus simulations are actually old news. eSchoolNews detailed efforts [free subscription required] by North Carolina schools to adopt bus driving simulators designed by the state highway patrol way back in 2001.
References:
North Carolina district tries 3-D driving simulator to improve bus safety. (2001, January 1). eSchoolNews. [Online.] Available: http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/top-news/?i=32981
P.W. County adopts simulation training for school bus drivers. (2009, September 17). WJLA. [Online.] Retrieved October 13, 2009 from http://www.wjla.com/news/stories/0909/660289.html