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Virtual reality experience for road safety education is revealed


Date: 15th November, 2022

A new road safety initiative is being launched this Road Safety Week by Dorset & Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service, using virtual reality to help young people understand the consequences of their behaviour when driving.

‘SDSA 360 VR’ provides a follow-up to the established Safe Drive Stay Alive education programme. The Service is leading on the scheme on behalf of the Wiltshire and Swindon Road Safety Partnership and Dorset Road Safe, and it is sponsored by sustainable mobility specialist, Arval UK.

The technology will be showcased at the company’s UK headquarters in Swindon and to members of the Swindon Wildcats team, who are also taking part in the immersive launch experience.

DWFRS Road Safety & Partnerships Manager Christine Sharma said: “Every year, students from Years 11 to 13 are invited to view the emotive Safe Drive Stay Alive presentation. This new initiative is available for teachers to deliver to students they feel may benefit from a more immersive, practical session. The 50-minute lesson allows young people to fully experience the consequences of good and poor decision-making. It’s important that members of the community are aware of the technology, to act as ambassadors in their own right, which is why this reveal during Road Safety Week is so important.”

The lesson ties in with the Personal, Social, Health and Economic (PSHE) curriculum and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, and will be available to schools on request, as long as students have already seen the Safe Drive roadshow, either online or in person.

Supported by teaching materials provided by the road safety team, the 360° experience includes a seven-minute film, where the student is in the front seat passenger in a car. Through the headset, they see and hear everything that happens when poor decisions are made, up to and including emergency response teams attending to them in the vehicle.

This is followed by another film, where better choices are made by the driver and the passengers in the car.

Ms Sharma said: “The lesson plan has been developed by our road safety team and teachers can book for up to 15 students at a time. Our staff, partners or volunteers will support delivery by operating the technology whilst the teacher delivers the lesson. The aim is to help students recognise how peer relationships can impact driving behaviours – both positively and negatively – and how they can address concerns about someone’s driving when they are a passenger. Our only requirements are that the young people taking part have seen the main Safe Drive Stay Alive show, and there is parental/carer consent if they are under 18.”

Ailsa Firth, executive sponsor for community activity and Director of HR at Arval UK said: “Supporting road safety in our local community is incredibly important and as a parent of teenagers, I know that this immersive experience will help to bring home the need for young people to make sensible decisions on the road. As part of my role, I am proud to work with the Fire and Rescue Service as we launch the ‘SDSA 360VR’ experience during Road Safety Week 2022, helping to keep more people safe on UK roads.”

To book the virtual reality lesson, teachers should contact their local road safety coordinator:

[email protected] for Swindon and Wiltshire, and [email protected] for Dorset and BCP.

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