hide
Refer Friends. Get $10*

Santa Cruz / Monterey

  • A
  • C
  • D
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • Canada
  • Other Countries
x hide

Oh no... You're too late for this Groupon!

Sign up for our daily email so you never miss another Groupon!

CaliforniaTeenDriving.com – Online Deal

$19 for Online Driver's-Ed Course ($49.95 Value)

$19
Buy
Sold Out
Tue Jan 01 07:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
$50
Discount
62%
You Save
$31
  • T460x279
  • Good for Kids

In a Nutshell

Online driving course allows teens to learn the rules of the road at their own pace, passing the state's 30-hour driver's-ed requirement

The Fine Print

  • Expires Jul 3, 2013
  • Registration required. Must be 15 or older.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

If you want to beat traffic, you can leave early, stay late, or go around pulling the engine out of every car you see. Ease transportation woes with this Groupon.

$19 for an Online Driver's-Ed Class ($49.95 Value)

After completing their registration, students may peruse the course at their leisure, browsing clearly written chapters, illustrative videos, and interactive animations. After completing the DMV-licensed course and successfully passing the online exam, students will receive completion certificates that meets the state's 30-hour driver's-education-course requirement.

CaliforniaTeenDriving.com

Approved by the California Department of Motor Vehicles, CaliforniaTeenDriving.com fulfills the state’s 30-hour driver's-education-course requirement with a convenient online course. The open-ended course is designed to be completed a each student’s leisure, while still thoroughly covering traffic laws, drivers’ responsibilities and other rules of the road. Upon course completion, students receive a certificate that can be presented at their local DMV as proof of driver's ed completion.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Minimizing Distractions

It’s easy to get distracted from what you’re doing, whether you’re writing an important essay, solving a mathematical proof, or crafting the perfect speech to explain spaying to your dog. Here are some sure-fire ways to minimize distractions and get the job done:

  • Turn off the TV.
  • Hide your video games.
  • Put the TV in a big box so you won’t look at it and imagine which of your favorite shows might be on.
  • Replace the box with a casket. TV is dead.
  • Burn your books: they’re just written TV.
  • Ask your roommate to move out if his life story is distractingly similar to that of classic TV character Mr. Simpson.
  • Close all the doors and windows so you don’t have to hear all the TVs driving down your street.
  • Imagine you’re on a TV show where you’ll win a million dollars if you don’t get distracted. Turn your TV back on so you can watch yourself on TV. Forget about what you were working on before; you’re a TV star now and you don’t have to do anything.

What is Mr. Simpson’s catch phrase?

CaliforniaTeenDriving.com