If you start learning at 17, you can be driving by the time you turn 18, and therefore get yourself to work/university/your children's daycare. Life in rural areas can get quite impossible if you can't get yourself off the farm.
Or do you get to start learning at 17 but can't take your test until you're 18? That would make sense...
In Belgium, you can only get your license when you turn 18, but can take the lessons - and drive around on a learner's permit - beforehand. However, only people who don't go to university and immediately start work really need that - university students very rarely drive, except perhaps in summer holidays. I've never bothered with driving lessons yet myself, though I probably should.
Since you mention rural areas, I seem to recall there's still an exception in our laws for farmers' children - the farmers' fields are private grounds anyway, they can have their kids drive tractors there if they want, but the law also allows kids of 14 and older to drive the tractor on the public road to get back home, iirc. Needless to say, this is not something that happens a lot.
New Orleans hotelier offers to host prom cancelled in Mississippi
- 14/03/2010 01:29:40 AM
533 Views
Sort of seems opportunistic really
- 14/03/2010 02:00:54 AM
213 Views
Given the nature of the people involved, I highly doubt they're willing to go to NOLA.
- 14/03/2010 03:31:33 AM
205 Views
- 14/03/2010 03:31:33 AM
205 Views
Re: Given the nature of the people involved, I highly doubt they're willing to go to NOLA.
- 14/03/2010 04:13:18 AM
195 Views
- 14/03/2010 04:13:18 AM
195 Views
Aren't high-school graduands generally 18?
- 14/03/2010 10:34:20 AM
210 Views
Prom is in early April - so statistically, only about 25% of students will have turned 18...
- 14/03/2010 03:40:26 PM
172 Views
That's probably off by a good deal, closer to 50%
- 14/03/2010 04:48:07 PM
192 Views
Ah, yes, that would make a difference.
- 14/03/2010 04:56:19 PM
187 Views
School years by birth year? That's far too logical and orderly for an English-speaking country!
- 14/03/2010 11:10:27 PM
179 Views
It's pretty arbitrary, but you have to consider the ramifications at the college level
- 15/03/2010 12:05:28 AM
183 Views
What are the "noticeable difficulties" with having 17-year-olds on campus?
- 15/03/2010 08:19:24 AM
173 Views
Mostly, I can only think of problems relating to sex.
- 15/03/2010 12:38:06 PM
158 Views
What on earth have students' sex lives got to do with the college?
- 15/03/2010 12:52:03 PM
172 Views
I was just suggesting it as a possible reason, there's no need to get persnickity.
- 15/03/2010 05:45:43 PM
157 Views
I didn't mean to be persnickety. I was just trying to understand.
- 15/03/2010 08:39:20 PM
159 Views
Well, they aren't legal adults...
- 15/03/2010 01:05:33 PM
165 Views
Because it means you can't pass your test until long after you've started your "independent" life.
- 15/03/2010 08:44:33 PM
196 Views
Depends on the country, I would imagine.
- 15/03/2010 08:53:40 PM
161 Views
Ah, good to know. Not quite as nuts as I thought then, at least in Belgium
. *NM*
- 15/03/2010 10:42:51 PM
59 Views
. *NM*
- 15/03/2010 10:42:51 PM
59 Views
All countries I'm aware of have "driving age" mean the age you can take the test
- 15/03/2010 10:24:16 PM
174 Views
Huh, maybe I was wrongly assuming everywhere was like here.
- 15/03/2010 10:33:50 PM
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in the states
- 15/03/2010 10:44:11 PM
164 Views
Here they recently changed the system too, so I'm not sure on the details, but...
- 15/03/2010 10:55:13 PM
151 Views


*NM*