Adults text while driving more than teens.
Half of all surveyed in an AT&T poll admitted it versus only 43% of teens.
Worse yet, 98% of the adults surveyed admit that it’s wrong and they do it anyway.
Two big lessons here.
One, when we make assumptions (for example, that younger people text more than adults) we are going on bad information.
Two, we underestimate the failure of adults to take a positive role in the use of digital devices (i.e., texting while driving, use of cellphone in the presence of children at dinner, texting as distraction from child rearing, etc.).
There are about 10 million teen drivers and 180 million adult drivers.
I always said I’d rather be driving near a young person who is texting because their reactions times are quicker than adults.
That would be a wrong assumption – see how easy it is to go off bad information?
State Farm takes a safe driving course around to high schools and tests students’ ability to react while texting in an off-road test situation.
Not one of them has ever been able to stop their simulators in time to avoid a crash.
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