My point is that there's no need for it on this thread. You guys aren't doing anything now besides acting like complete jerks. Being corrected is one thing, constantly shoving mistakes in my face is something else. Get a freaking life and move on for the love of god.
How Much Experience Should A Trainer Have?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by MojoPotatoe, Oct 1, 2011.
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Last edited: Oct 2, 2011
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One more note on the subject:
For the most part, trainers with experience are a nice commodity to have, but you guys are forgetting a key aspect:
Requiring trainers to have at least 5 years of experience or more is going to create a short supply of trainers. Even shorter if you only hire trainers that actually want to teach instead of just using a student for a logbook. This means students would sit in a hotel or company terminal for months and months before they would get paired up with a trainer. I don't know of anyone that would be willing to sit that long without getting paid.
Phase I trainers are the trainers that teach you how to drive. You need at least 1 year of driving experience to be a Phase I trainer. -
You can't just pick and arbitrary number like 5 years. I knew a guy who had 30 years and didn't know jack. All he could do was shift and back up.
When I was at about a year I had a partner with 14 months experience. He was no good. I tried to teach him about HOS but he wouldn't listen.
I have 2 years and I'm confident I could teach a person how to be a trucker. You don't need to have experienced every little thing to be good. You just need to be able to think.
Now, that doesn't mean that I think everyone with 2 years is qualified. There is a lot more to it than just the number of years.THBatMan8 Thanks this. -
no surprise the industry is in the toilet..
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On this forum, as in real life, I generaly keep my mouth shut and my eyes open. But Im bored, so I guess I'll put in my .02.
In a fair and perfect world, yes, every trainer would have at least 5-10 years of safe driving experience. Unfortunately, real life is seldom fair, and far from perfect. Currently, driver turnover is hovering somewhere around 137%. This is due to a bunch of different factors,
(old timers retiring, new guys coming in with no clue, plain old frustration, etc.). with driver turnover so high, companies are forced to take on new students and shove them out the door with a minimum of real training, just to be competitive. having to deploy so many students, leads to a shortage of qualified trainers, therefore the companies lower their trainer standards just to keep up with student demand. Its a vicious cycle with the probable outcome of eventually having students teaching students. SO..... instead of arguing about how much experience is enough, how bout instead, we start opining on just to fix this problem. May or may not do any good for us here to come up with an answer, but, who knows? maybe some office pogue will come across this thread and learn something.
again just my .02MojoPotatoe and J R W Thank this. -
I definitely wouldn't say 1 year or even three. Let's do it the driver way by miles......500,000 accident free and no D<O<T shutdowns for logs or anything a driver could control. (maintenance excluded)
MojoPotatoe Thanks this. -
MojoPotatoe Thanks this.
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