What is the Scoring Standard for Subject 2?
2 Answers
Subject 2 scoring standard is based on the in-field driving test, which only has pass or fail results. Below is additional information: 1. Test sequence: hill start and stop at a designated point, parallel parking, curve driving, right-angle turn, and reverse parking. 2. Deduction criteria: not wearing a seatbelt deducts 100 points, not closing the car door properly deducts 100 points, not using the turn signal when starting, turning, changing lanes, overtaking, or stopping, or using it for less than 3 seconds, deducts 10 points. Stalling the engine once deducts 10 points. 3. Venue requirements: the slope of the steep hill must be greater than or equal to 10 degrees, and the length of the steep hill must be greater than or equal to 20 meters. During the test, after stopping on the steep hill, the candidate must start within 30 seconds, otherwise it is considered a failure.
I just passed the second subject of the driving test and would like to share my experience. The grading criteria mainly focus on several items such as reversing into a garage, parallel parking, stopping and starting on a slope, curve driving, and right-angle turns. Each item has specific points that can be deducted. For example, running over the line with the wheels results in an immediate failure with a 100-point deduction, exceeding the parking time usually deducts 10 to 20 points, and not checking the rearview mirror or misaligning the car body during reversing into a garage will also lead to point deductions. If the engine stalls or the car rolls back during slope starting, points will be deducted. During my test, I almost hit the edge line due to nervousness, but fortunately, I reacted quickly and saved my points. A total score of at least 80 is required to pass, so attention to detail is crucial. I recommend practicing mock tests frequently, familiarizing yourself with the layout of the test site, and not neglecting small things like checking the rearview mirror, as this can prevent minor mistakes from accumulating into major problems. Keeping a calm mindset ensures precise movements; otherwise, panic can lead to failure.