Results
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#1. What mindset should teens adopt regarding night driving and glare?
Awareness, slower speed, and glare-reduction techniques help prevent accidents at night.
#2. True or False: Night glare only affects older drivers.
All drivers, especially teens, can be affected by night glare; it slows reaction time and impairs visibility.
#3. What is night glare?
Night glare can temporarily blind drivers and reduce reaction time.
#4. Which of the following can help reduce night glare while driving?
Minimizing reflective surfaces and bright lights improves visibility at night.
#5. Which of the following can increase the effects of night glare?
Visibility is affected by both environmental conditions and driver readiness.
#6. What is a safe strategy to reduce the effects of night glare from oncoming cars?
Looking at the right lane edge helps maintain lane position while avoiding temporary blindness.
#7. True or False: Using high beams in areas with oncoming traffic increases glare risk.
High beams can blind oncoming drivers and increase the risk of collisions.
#8. True or False: Wearing sunglasses at night helps reduce night glare.
Sunglasses reduce overall visibility at night and make glare worse.
#9. True or False: Night glare only comes from oncoming headlights.
Glare can come from oncoming traffic, streetlights, reflective surfaces, and dashboard lights.
#10. How should you adjust your following distance at night when glare is present?
Reduced visibility requires extra space to react safely to traffic changes.



