• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact Us

Agency Checklists

Massachusetts Insurance News & Job Opportunities

You are here: Home / Legislative & Economic News / Online Driver’s Ed May Survive as Pandemic Reform

Online Driver’s Ed May Survive as Pandemic Reform

January 20, 2022 by AC Editor

Agency Checklists, MA Insurance News, Mass. Insurance News

Some Instructors Say In-Person Classes More Meaningful


Driving instructors on Tuesday offered mixed opinions over whether Massachusetts should allow the classroom portion of the state’s required driver’s education to be offered online.

Driver’s license applicants under the age of 18 are required to complete a driver’s education program, either through a public high school or a private driving school licensed by the Registry of Motor Vehicles. The courses involve a minimum of 30 hours of classroom instruction, along with 18 hours of on-road instruction.

Bills filed by Salem Democrats Sen. Joan Lovely and Rep. Paul Tucker, which came before the Transportation Committee at a Tuesday hearing, would allow the registrar to also “approve a driver education curriculum presented in an online teaching format.” The bills (S 2353, H 3615) would also do away with the requirement that the 18 hours of in-car training include six hours of observing another student.

Lovely said the legislation aims to make permanent an online option that became available during the pandemic.

“Not only have scores for these classes gone up with the online option, online opportunity, but we’ve also seen more students be able to participate,” she said.

Tucker and Lovely said their AAA-backed bills would make classes more accessible to student drivers with health concerns, after-school jobs or sports practices, and those who lack transportation to and from their classes.

Mary Maguire, director of public and government affairs at AAA Northeast, said that more than 25 states have approved some form of online driver’s education, and Georgia passed a law doing so in 2007.

Testifying against the bills, Jake Cooney of CMSC Driving School warned of the possibility that large national online programs could come into Massachustts with “an out-of-the-box program with no live instruction tied to a certified instructor or a licensed school, and they’ll just roll it out to scale for $29,” driving local schools out of business and offering no engagement for students.

“We were one of the first adopters to online education during the shutdown,” he said. “We ramped up fast with our Zoom learning, but it was under a strict directive from the registry that it may only be a live online class taught by a certified professional driving instructor.”

Another driving school operator, Joe Evans, said some of his instructors refuse to teach online but motivate students effectively in person. He argued that the classroom experience can’t be replicated.

“Coming into our class, the first thing we do, we shut off our cellphones,” Evans said. “Guess what, I can tell you when a kid gets in front of his computer at home at night, at 8:00 or 7:00 in the evening, guess what’s in front of them? Their cellphone. When they get in that car the first time we want them to start learning to not use that cellphone, not have it with them.”

Kathleen Donohue Johnson, who owns Donohue’s Driving School in Hudson, said she was “strongly in favor” of the legislation and has completed 15 online classes since March 2020. Attendance and test scores have gone up and parents have enjoyed the convenience, she said.

“I believe that the online option has been so wonderful for so many people,” she said. “It gives everyone the comfort of learning about safety, being safe. We’re teaching them to be good, safe drivers, but from the safety of their own home.”

Joanna Capparella said her son took an online driving course through their local AAA chapter in spring 2021, benefitting in two ways from the virtual experience. Capparella said her son commutes an hour each way to high school, and her family did not have to shoulder the burden of additional transportation to the classes. He also relies on assistive devices for his dyslexia, and the online format “allowed him to access the information in a manner that classroom instruction does not,” she said.

“He is a safe informed driver as a result of his participation on the online coursework,” Capparella said.

Primary Sidebar

New Episode

MA Insurance Lawyers

SPONSORED

Interviews

From Nuptials, Tickets, and Taxes to Trusted Advisor: One Agency’s Unique Path to P&C Success

A Conversation with Evan Silverio, President & CEO of Silverio Insurance Group

Deland, Gibson Celebrates 125 Years: A Conversation with CEO Chip Gibson

The Fourth-Generation Family-Owned Agency is Based in Wellesley

Talking with Richard Welch: Growth and Innovation at Hospitality Mutual | Agency Checklists

Talking with Richard Welch: Growth and Innovation at Hospitality Mutual

Mr. Welch is CEO of Massachusetts-based Hospitality Insurance Group

A Conversation with Daniel C. Bridge – The 2023 Insurance Professional of the Year

Daniel Bridge is Board Chair, President, and CEO of Vermont Mutual Insurance Group

Making The Leap From Corporate to Entrepreneur: Nadeen Vella On Building NaVella Insurance From Scratch

Making The Leap From Corporate to Entrepreneur: Nadeen Vella On Building NaVella Insurance From Scratch

Our latest Agency Interview is with Nadeen Vella, the founder and owner of a virtual scratch independent agency.

A North Shore Success Story: The $40 Million And Growing Duffy Family of Insurance Agencies

Our latest Agency Interview with Duffy Insurance’s Marc Duffy

More Posts from this Category

InsurOp-Eds

Passing of the Torch: Becoming Arbella’s Next CEO

Passing of the Torch: Becoming Arbella’s Next CEO

By Paul Brady

Uninsurable Risk? Maybe Parametric Insurance Is The Answer

By Owen Gallagher

InsurOpEd: Starting A New Chapter in My Life

By Tara Philbin

InsurOp-Ed: Shrinkflation and Insurance

InsurOp-Ed: Shrinkflation and Insurance

By Bill Wilson

More InsurOp-Eds

Career News

MountainOne Insurance Promotes Lianne Kudlate to Senior Personal Lines Account Manager

Brown & Brown Integrates Risk Strategies Talent to its Team

Allstate Shakes Up Its Senior Leadership Team

SAN Group Announces Promotion of Lisa Paese to Agency Onboarding Specialist

View More Career News

In Memoriam

In Memoriam: Roy Corso: 1943-2025

In Memoriam: Kevin Hugh Kelley, 1950-2025

In Memoriam: Kevin Hugh Kelley, 1950-2025

In Memoriam: Stephen Lee Brown, 1937-2025

In Memoriam: Stephen Lee Brown, 1937-2025

Company News

Fundación MAPFRE Celebrates 50 Years of Impact at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Agency Checklists, Mass. Insurance News

MAPFRE, MassDOT Offer Tips To Share During Pedestrian Safety Month

Union Mutual Raises Over $147,000 for the Kelly Brush Foundation

SIAA Hosts IA Evolve, a Virtual Innovation Event to Empower Independent Insurance Agents

SIAA Hosts IA Evolve, a Virtual Innovation Event to Empower Independent Insurance Agents

Footer

Agency Checklists

Contact us

We offer a variety of ways to get help promote your company or product.

Announcements
Email Sponsorships
Partnerships
Custom Collaborations

*Affiliate Disclosure

Please note that any of Agency Checklists’ articles might contain one or more affiliate links. This means that any subsequent purchase resulting from these links may result in a commission for us, but at no additional cost to you. For example, as an Amazon Associate, Agency Checklists earns a commission from all qualifying purchases. By working with affiliates we can continue to keep Agency Checklists subscription free. Thank you for your support.

Explore Our Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Agency Checklists · All rights reserved.

 

Loading Comments...