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Distracted drivers a difficult problem to solve

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The best method to prevent distracted driving habits is to stop them before they start, said Mark Sykes, a driver’s education instructor at DeKalb High School.

Classroom sessions on the dangers of texting, iPods and the use of other electronic devices while driving has become a much larger portion of the curriculum, he said. Many of the students have already entered driver’s education as savvy users of the devices and witnessed friends and family talk on cell phones or text while driving, he said.

That existing level of comfort with the devices makes it even more important that students understand the danger, he said.

“If they do it once, they feel like they will have no problem doing it again,” Sykes said of texting while driving. “Alcohol is still the number one problem, but we don’t want this to keep creeping up. There needs to be more awareness made.”

The sometimes intense public service announcements and graphic educational material has sent the message to Rodney Wilson.

Wilson, a sophomore in Sykes’ class, said while he has seen family and friends text while driving he has also seen enough of the potential consequences to keep his phone down.

“I think most of us take it very seriously,” Wilson said. “We’re just starting to drive.”

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