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| 1 minute read

7th-Grader Stops School Bus in Emergency

One story that has been all over the Internet recently is the 7th-grader who safely stopped a school bus when his bus driver passed out. Some background that hasn’t been getting a lot of attention are some skills that may have come into play when he needed them.

Stopping a loaded school bus requires slowly pressing the brake, not the instinctive jamming on brakes that most of us would do in a similar situation. Dillon Reeves said that he knew to stop the bus slowly because he had watched the bus driver “every day.” His dad said that the fact that the boy didn’t have a cell phone may have helped him be more observant.

Another important factor may have been that Dillon had some practice driving golf carts, and had spent time sitting on his dad’s lap behind the wheel on country roads starting from age 4. There is a big difference between golf carts and school busses, but you could make an argument that driving golf carts built up at least some muscle memory that came in handy when he needed to stop a school bus.

This story illustrates the principle that the more skills our kids learn, the more confident they will be in a crisis. While we don’t recommend illegally letting kids sit in your lap while driving, letting them learn skills on golf carts, bicycles, go-carts, scooters, and other legal vehicles undoubtedly will teach them both skills and self-confidence. Of course, none of us wants our kids to have to be able to stop a school bus, but we can’t always protect our kids from danger. What we can do is start as early as possible equipping them to handle whatever crisis confronts them.

The Reeveses said Dillon has driven golf carts and has been sitting on his dad’s lap while driving on country roads since he was 4. “I asked him, ‘Dillon, how did you know what to do? How did you know how to drive that bus?’ And he said, ‘I watch her do it every day.’ So he pays very close attention to everybody,” Ireta Reeves said.

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resilience, ausburn_deborah, youth services law, insights