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Young Drivers in Gloucestershire: A research led approach to engagement. Natalie Oakley Public Engagement Manager, Gloucestershire Road Safety Partnership. Young driver crashes in Gloucestershire. Who: Young men (68%) What: Driver error Where: Rural roads When: W eekends.
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Young Drivers in Gloucestershire: A research led approach to engagement Natalie Oakley Public Engagement Manager, Gloucestershire Road Safety Partnership
Young driver crashes in Gloucestershire Who: Young men (68%) What: Driver error Where: Rural roads When: Weekends
Starting the conversation The Survey Questions • experiences of being a car driver • perceptions of skill • driving behaviour • experiences of collisions, speeding • attitudes towards breaking the law The Study • Quantitative online survey of over 1000 students in 6 broad geographical & socio-demographic areas • 16 x 1 hour qualitative depth interviews with drivers and passengers • experiences of being a passenger • driving behaviours experienced • experiences of collisions, speeding • levels of anxiety experienced • beliefs concerning • why young drivers have crashes • what might change their behaviour • what else should be done to tackle the problem of young driver crashes
Working them out • The people • Many still living at home • Defined by social life & dynamics of friendship groups • Developing own identity by pushing boundaries and playing with risk • Driving either with complete nervousness or total cockiness • The drivers • Car is a bubble of independence, “me space – who I am” • Chance to “beat the system” and to escape • Cheap venue • The media • Social media main channel of contact • Immune to “shocking” content – watching crashes for “fun” • Limited live media - self streamed content – iPods vs. radio, Iplayer vs. TV but still accessing outdoor, print media • Embarrassed by “yoof” marketing, text speak
The age split • 17-19 year old driver • New found freedom • Ability to let rip • The chance to impress • Fight for supremacy • Everyone wants you (for a lift) • Babe magnet • Irresponsible Billy, 17, 2 weeks post test, drives at weekends
The age split 20-24 years old drivers • Economic necessity • Becoming responsible • Life stresses showing • Value car as an asset • Believe more skilful • Still erratic behaviours Molly, 21, driving 4 years, commutes to work
The behaviour split Types of behaviours Unplanned Planned • In-car distractions • group chat • loud music • digital dependency • Lonedriving & speeding • open road mentality of speeding • no other cars around – ok to put your foot down • Cramming • 6/7 crammed into car – the lunchtime trip to McD’s • Nocturnal activities • car park meets/rallies • racing/cruising • rights of passage/dares • no destination journeys • Motivated by • proving yourself • gang mentality • thrill seeking • Motivated by • mood • impulse • being scatty • bad time keeping Education Targeted Prevention
Observed and self reported behaviours Behaviours by drivers as observed by passengers (male & female)
Observed and self reported behaviours • Male v female behaviours(self reported)
Beliefs and anxiety Perceived levels of skill amongst young drivers Levels of fear and anxiety amongst young passengers
What did they say would change their driving behaviour? • Behaviour change levers
What do they want us to do? Help change attitudes Raise awareness • Drivers • Unpick the “coolness” of reckless driving • Campaign in a way that young people can engage with – right tone, right concept, don’t judge, don’t compare • Passengers • Give them the tools to stand up to dangerous drivers • Of risk • Speeding • Mobile phones • Driving on soft drugs • Cramming • Of consequence • Real life scenarios and outcomes • Of criminality of reckless driving • The laws and the consequences Help improve skills Law enforcement • Follow up courses for new drivers • Stronger tests • Ongoing learning • Awareness training • Changing dangerous behaviours • Be visible to them • Enforce the rules around specific behaviours • Enforce at known night spots • Help regulate dangerous behaviour • Harsher penalties
Speaking to them directly and campaigning effectively • The Designed to Drive programme was: • 6 week engagement programme with students from Gloucestershire College
Giving them the skills to drive safely • The Drive for Life session covers: • Speeding • Distractions • Collision investigation • Drink & drug driving • Seatbelts • Real life crashes & consequences • Boys & Girls – gender specific training
Regulating behaviour and enforcing the law • Development of the Gloucestershire Road Safety Academy • Access to Police collision data • £120k investment from the Police & Crime Commissioner • Targeted enforcement using the Special Constabulary and Roads Policing Unit
Conclusions • Our research led approach to engagement has and will continue to enable us to: • Build targeted and age/sex specific programmes of engagement • Redefine our communication channels with young people • Understand attitudes, beliefs and behaviours so that we can begin to affect them • Raiseawareness of the key risks for young drivers in Glos • Enforce the law around specific behaviours