What to Do If You Really Can't Pass the Driver's License Test?
3 Answers
Many people fail the test multiple times, primarily due to inadequate psychological resilience. Each test subject has five attempts, with each attempt offering two opportunities, equivalent to ten chances per subject. If you fail all ten attempts, you can only re-register and take the test again.
When I was taking my driver's license test, I was quite worried too, failing three times in a row. Later, I realized it was mainly because I was too nervous and my hands were shaking badly, so I practiced meditation relaxation techniques every night before bed. In the morning, I deliberately went to the test site to observe others taking the test to get familiar with the atmosphere. Before each practice session, I chewed gum to relieve anxiety and recorded the instructor's nagging to listen to it repeatedly. In fact, after reaching the technical standard, mindset becomes the decisive factor. Now, having had my license for over two years, I think back to how I even studied psychology books specifically to understand the manifestations of test anxiety, and it really worked.
If you keep failing, you need to change your training method. I recorded every practice session with my phone and checked each frame against the scoring criteria to see where points were deducted. I specifically practiced reversing in the parking lot during the early morning when there were fewer people, marking accurate reference points. I focused on overcoming my recurring mistakes in hill starts, practicing this single maneuver over twenty laps. Even when not driving, I observed bus drivers' gear-shifting rhythms during commutes, and even dreamed of pressing the clutch. The results proved that precise training is far more effective than random practice—I passed the second driving test in one go.