What Does PTDE Do For You
PTDE provides instructors an alternative to commercial or public school driver education and allows students to work at their own pace. A TDLR approved PTDE course will teach your student what he/she needs to know to obtain a learner license and/or provisional license.Parent Taught Driver Education Course Requirements
This packet does not contain any of the approved PTDE course material. The instructor is responsible for obtaining a PTDE
course approved by TDLR. An instructor may not use his/her own PTDE developed course unless TDLR has approved
the course before any instruction begins.
The instructor is responsible to ensure that the student masters all materials which must be covered while in the PTDE
Program. Upon completion of the required hours of instruction, the instructor must certify to DPS that he/she has provided
all required hours of instruction under the PTDE Program. The Certificate of Completion (along with all documents required)
presented during the learner license or provisional license application process will become official records of DPS.
Each approved PTDE course has a name and an assigned course number (see Appendix A). The instructor is responsible
to know the name and number of the approved PTDE course used to teach the student. The instructor is required to write
this information on several of the forms utilized for the PTDE Program.
Parent Taught Driver Education Methodology
There are two methods, Block and Concurrent, which may be used to instruct your student.
● The Block Method is when the 32 hours of classroom instruction is taught in its entirety before the in-car
observation begins.
● The Concurrent Method is when the classroom instruction and in-car observation are taught simultaneously.
Block Method
The 32 hours of classroom instruction are taught as one “block.” Once the instructor has provided the entire 32 hours of
classroom instruction, he/she must complete the required certifications indicating that the entire 32 hours of classroom
instruction were taught under the Block Method. The student can then apply for his/her learner license.
Once the student obtains his/her learner license, the instructor can teach the 44 hours of the Behind-the-Wheel phase. The
30 hours of behind-the-wheel practice can be completed with the instructor or an adult over 21 years of age who has held a
license for more than one year. The Behind-the-Wheel phase consists of 37 hours of behind-the-wheel instruction (at least
10 hours of instruction must take place at night), and 7 hours of in-car observation.
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