Fatal 5
GLS
Distraction & Phones
Passengers & Peer Pressure
Buying a safe car
100

Name one of the Fatal 5.

Speeding, drink/drug driving, fatigue, no seatbelt, distractions.

100

What colour are the plates for a learner driver?

Yellow L plates.

100

What is the safest place to put your phone while driving?

In the glovebox or on silent/out of reach.

100

Why are passengers a risk for young drivers?

They can distract or pressure the driver.

100

What rating system helps you choose a safe car?

ANCAP or Used Car Safety Ratings.

200

Which Fatal 5 factor is involved in the highest number of young driver crashes?

Speeding

200

Can a P1 driver use a mobile phone in a holder?

No — no phone use at all.

200

Name one type of distraction other than phones.

Loud music, eating, passengers, adjusting controls.

200

What is one way to manage an unsafe passenger?

Ask them to stop, pull over, set rules.


200

What is the recommended minimum safety rating for a first car?

4-5 stars

300

Why is fatigue especially dangerous for young drivers?

Young people often drive late, after work, or with limited sleep — reaction time drops dramatically.

300

What is the passenger restriction for P1 drivers?

Only 1 passenger under 21 between 11pm–5am.

300

Why is texting while driving so dangerous?

Eyes off road, hands off wheel, mind off driving.

300

Why might a young driver give in to peer pressure?

Desire to fit in, fear of conflict.

300

Name one modern safety feature.

ABS, airbags, ESC, lane assist, AEB.

400

How does not wearing a seatbelt increase injury risk?

You can be thrown forward or ejected from the vehicle; forces multiply in a crash.

400

Why does the GLS place restrictions on speed and passengers?

To reduce risk while drivers build experience.

400

What is “attentional blindness”?

When you look at something but don’t actually see it due to distraction.

400

Give an example of assertive communication in the car.

“I need you to stop distracting me — it’s unsafe.”

400

Why are older cars riskier for young drivers?

Fewer safety features, weaker crash protection.

500

Explain how two Fatal 5 factors can combine to create a “perfect storm” for a crash.

Example: fatigue + distraction → slower reaction + less attention.

500

Explain how the GLS reduces crash risk for young drivers.

Limits high‑risk situations (speed, passengers, phones) while skills develop.

500

Describe a strategy to avoid distraction on long drives.

Pre‑set GPS, playlist, and climate controls before driving.

500

Explain how passengers can influence crash risk even without touching the driver. (At least 3 reasons)

Noise, conversations, filming, encouraging risky behaviour.

500

Explain how choosing a safer car can reduce serious injury by up to 60%.

Better crash protection, structural integrity, and active safety systems.

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