
Here are the reasons why Subject 2 driving practice may get worse the more you practice: 1. Practicing too much can lead to inconsistent methods: The reference points and operation techniques taught by the instructor are based on daily training and accumulated experience—a scientifically proven theory. It's crucial to adhere to the instructor's methods and avoid frequent changes. Excessive practice may cause you to switch methods arbitrarily, relying on luck to get things right. Accidentally succeeding once might make you overlook your problems or ignore the instructor's guidance while blindly practicing, which is not advisable. 2. Lack of concentration: The decline in performance during Subject 2 practice is directly related to the learner's inattentiveness and lack of focus. Initially, you may be highly focused, but over time, impatience, carelessness, and fatigue set in, leading to worsening performance and loss of confidence. In such cases, take a break, adjust your mindset, reflect on your performance, and regain composure before starting the next round of practice. Every practice session requires full attention to detail and accuracy. 3. Over-practicing leads to carelessness: The main reason for worsening performance in Subject 2 is that, after becoming proficient, you lose the initial sensitivity and become more casual, increasing the likelihood of mistakes. No matter how skilled you think you are in Subject 2, never let your guard down. Strictly follow the instructor's methods, avoid impatience or inventing your own techniques, and you can prevent "getting worse the more you practice." Stay calm, learn attentively, and practice diligently.

I also experienced a decline in performance while practicing for the Subject 2 driving test, probably due to excessive training that led to physical and mental fatigue. At first, progress was rapid—I spent two hours daily at the driving school. But within a few days, I started making more mistakes in reverse parking and parallel parking: running over lines, stalling the engine, and with increasing frequency. Upon reflection, my coach had repeatedly advised me to balance work and rest, but I ignored it, leading to decreased concentration and uncoordinated movements. In this state, repeated practice only reinforced the wrong actions, forming bad habits. Later, I forced myself to train for just one hour a day, with 15-minute breaks in between to take a walk or drink water. After a week, there was noticeable improvement. The key is to control the pace—don’t overdo it—and ensure sufficient sleep and relaxation to truly enhance skills. The driving test isn’t a sprint; adjust your mindset patiently, and your performance will naturally stabilize.

From my personal experience, the more you practice Subject 2 (parking/driving test), the worse you get, often due to incorrect methods or overlooking details. I experienced this in my early practice days too. For example, when practicing S-turns, I couldn't properly observe the rearview mirror angles and always felt the reference points were off. The more I practiced, the messier my trajectory became. The root cause was accumulating minor mistakes during practice without timely feedback, leading to incorrect muscle memory. Fortunately, I consulted an experienced driver back then. He suggested recording each attempt with my phone and reviewing it afterward, focusing on clutch control or steering wheel hand gestures during turns to identify blind spots for correction. Meanwhile, avoid rote memorization and adjust dynamically based on actual scenarios. Driving school training shouldn't involve mindless repetition; you need to summarize mistakes daily and fine-tune methods—that's how practice becomes efficient. After persisting with this approach, I turned things around in two weeks and developed much more solid skills.

Poor performance in Subject 2 often stems from weak fundamentals or mental imbalance. I remember when I first started learning, my initial attempts at reversing went smoothly, but as I intensified practice, mistakes crept in—mainly due to nervousness: the pressure of approaching exams made my movements stiff and reactions sluggish. Psychologically, this is called negative reinforcement, where the fear of failure increases the likelihood of mistakes. I suggest trying to shift focus, like listening to light music during practice to relax or sharing experiences with friends to ease anxiety. Additionally, don’t just rely on brute-force practice; break down and strengthen weak areas step by step: first practice clutch and brake control separately, then integrate them into the full exercise. Small, incremental improvements can rebuild confidence and quickly reverse the downward trend. Everyone hits roadblocks on their driving test journey—the key is learning to grow from mistakes.


