They are not meant to be all encompassing but provide the minimum basic
signals for the driver and spotter. Other signals needed in particularly difficult
areas must be discussed and agreed upon in advance by the driver and spotter.
In-Car Distractions:The things we have to watch out for on the road are
complicated enough, what with changes in weather and light, unpredictable
drivers, and traffic. But what about the distractions that come from inside our
own vehicle? Consider these:
Passengers: Conversations with passengers can get out of hand, especially if
there is an argument or emotionally heated discussion going on; if someone is
trying to show you how something works or looks; or if someone is talking
loudly, laughing or roughhousing. Ask your passengers to remain in their seats,
with safety belts on, and to keep their voices lowered and their hands off each
other and the driver.
Objects That Obstruct: Be careful about how you load your car. Objects
should not be piled so high that the view from the rearview mirror is obstructed.
For the same reason, don’t place things on the ledge behind the rear seat. Not
only do they obstruct view, but in a sudden stop they could fly forward into the
front seat or the back of your head. If you must hang clothes in your car, hang
them only behind the driver’s seat. Make sure that objects don’t obstruct your
ability to steer, shift gears or look over your shoulder.
Visibility: When driving at night, keep your rearview mirror turned so it
doesn’t reflect the full glare of headlights behind you. Keep your windows clean
inside and out so that you can see clearly even in the glare of oncoming lights.
Keep your radio at a moderate pitch—loud noises impede your concentration.
Driver-Created Distractions: Some in-car distractions are created by the
driver. Eating, drinking, especially hot drinks, reading maps or newspapers and
doing other chores such as talking on the cellular phone, grooming or writing
notes, can be distracting or even dangerous in themselves.
If you’re driving an unfamiliar vehicle, learn where the controls and warning
lights are before you start driving. Groping around for the windshield wiper
control is not a safe way to negotiate a sudden rainstorm. To be a safe driver,
keep things as simple as possible in your car. You need all of your attention to
focus on the distractions on the outside of your car.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 51 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
How to Park a Car Perfectly?
With the growing amount of vehicles on our roads, parking is becoming a much more
demanding task. But every problem can be solved if we have a good guideline and spend
our time for it. Same goes with parking.
There are 3 different types of parking: Angle Parking, Perpendicular Parking and Parallel
Parking.
Angle Parking
Knowning about how to park a car by angle parking way is the thing that everydriver has
to know, particularly when they drive in high-traffic areas such as high traffic areas or
parking garages or on one-way streets. Learning to park at an angle is not easier but it is not
impossible for newbies. Here are 5 steps to do:
Step 1: Find your parking spot
How to park a car by angle parking technique?
The perfect parking spot for new car owners must be clear and no vehicles surrounding. If
there are no cars around, drivers will not be distracted while parking.
Step 2: Analyze your car position
To be able for drivers to park your vehicle in the right spot while also maintain the distance
with other cars, analyzing the position is necessary.
A simple trick to remember for drivers while parking is the distance. Car owners should
keep about 1.5 m – 2 m from other cars. If there are no cars next to your parking lot,
remember to keep the same distance calculating from the last point of the line in the spot.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 52 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Step 3: Turn On Light Signal
The center point of the parking lot is the place you might want to parking. Also, it is
important to notice if there are any other drivers waiting to park in that spot or stopping
right behind you.
After that, turn on the light signal.
Step 4: Turn The Wheel
When you reach to the suitable point, turn the steering wheel half its rotation and slowly
drive your car until it reaches the final line in the spot.
Step 5: Adjust the wheel
The wheels should be adjusted to be parallel with the car body in order to drive out the
parking lot easily.
REFERENCES
https://cse.google.com/cse?q=MOVE+AND+POSITION+VEHICLE&sa=Search&ie
=UTF-8&cx=partner%2Dpub-3317167162609756%3A3134777453#%9C
https://carfromjapan.com/article/driving-tips/guideline-for-easy-parking/
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 53 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
SELF CHECK 2.2-3
READ THE INSTUCTION CAREFULLY; The answers are provided for each
of the following questions. Select the best answer.
1. Parking is not allowed
a, within four meters of a fire hydrant
b, On one- way street
c, In a crosswalk
2. Parking lights are used
a, at anytime
b, for parking and when the visibility is poor
c, when driving on an inadequately- lighted street
3. turn front wheels into the curb or toward the side of the road.
a, uphill headed parking
b, downhill headed parking
c, parking on hells
4. turn front wheels from curb and let your vehicle roll back few inches until
the rear of the front wheel gently touches the curb
a, uphill headed parking
b, downhill headed parking
c, parking on hells
5. The driver shall get out of the vehicle and make a complete ------------? walk
around survey of the vehicle to determine if any obstructions and potential
hazards are present in the proposed path of travel.
a, 720 degrees
b,360 degrees
c, 190 degrees
6. ---------? shall stay clear of the vehicle’s path and avoid walking backward.
a, Driver
b, operator
c, spotter
7. The Driver shall not proceed with positioning/backing unless the traffic -----
are visible to the driver.
a, lights
b, cones
c, spotter
8. Conversations with-----------? can get out of hand, especially if there is an
argument or emotionally heated discussion going on
a, passenger
b, driver
c, stranger
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
DRIVING NCII Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
March 7, 2018
Common Competency Revised By: Date Revised: Page 54 of 59
UC 2-Moving and Lea Liberty A. Wangag 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Position Vehicle Trainer
9. When driving at night, keep your --------------? turned so it doesn’t reflect
the full glare of headlights behind you.
a, side view mirror
b, rearview mirror
c, center mirror
10. On or within -------?. of a bridge, over or under or across the highway
a, 50m
b, 30m
c, 100m
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 55 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
ANSWER KEY LO 2
1. A
2. B
3. B
4. A
5. B
6. C
7. C
8. A
9. B
10.C
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 56 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Task Sheet 2.2-3
Title: Part Vehicle following safety techniques
Performance Objectives:
Identify proper parking following safety procedures and
techniques
Equipment: Jeep
Steps / Procedure:
1. Find your parking spot
2. Analyze your car position
3. Turn On Light Signal
4. Turn The Wheel
5. Adjust the wheel
Assessment Method: Questioning/ Interview
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 57 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
PERFORMANCE CRITERIA CHECKLIST 2.2-3
CRITERIA YES NO
Did you . . .
1. Find your parking spot?
2. Analyse your car position?
3. Turn On Light Signal?
4. Turn The Wheel?
5. Adjust the wheel?
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 58 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
INFORMATION SHEET 2.3-1
Check Vehicle position
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: AFTER READING THIS INFORMATION
SHEET THE TRAINEES MUST BE ABLE TO.
Distinguish on how to position the vehicle
Identify vehicle external damage.
VEHICLE SAFETY
Park the car off the road and in a safe pace with the handbrake on the gearbox in neutral
for a manual car or park(P) in an automatic car. You will need to have the engine
running to operate some of the following items, and for others at least the ignition
turned on.
VEHICLE CHECK AFTER LONG TRIP
STEP 1. CLEAN UP THE CAR, INSIDE AND OUTSIDE.
After a few weeks on the road, your vehicle must be dirty, both inside and outside,
which means that cleaning work will be a hassle when you go back home. Removing
stains and spills is a hard but necessary to get your car looking and feeling good
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 59 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
STEP 2. REPAIR THE CAR IF SOMETHING GOES WRONG DURING JOURNEY.
You may also experience a sudden breakdown during the trip, even when everything
gets prepared before travel. Stay calm when something bad happens and try to fix it so
it doesn’t ruin your trip. When you go back home, do not forget to get that part repaired
and checked again, just in case.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 60 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
STEP 3. HAVE THE CAR MAINTENANCE AND GET READY FOR NEXT
JOURNEY.
You may have quality time during the journey, but it is a tiring time for your car .
therefore, after taking you around different places for visit , it also deserve a complete
car maintenance, which can not only improve driving safety and prepare for the next
journey but can also save you the possible expensive repair costs and avoid
emergencies. If you are tired of doing maintenance by your self. People from auto
services can also do that for you providing expert advice.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 61 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Position 5
Making a proper right turn (when lane opens up at intersection)
It’s more complicated when approaching an intersection where the lane
opens up. Because the stop line is further out, you must move over from
your normal blocking position in the curb lane to prevent a car from
coming up on the inside on the wider part of the road. Make a shoulder
check; move over to the right about 1.2 m from the edge of the roadway;
make your right turn and then make another shoulder check and move
back to the proper blocking position – to the left of the centre of the lane.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 62 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Position 5A
Making a proper right turn (no change in lane size at intersection)
When approaching an intersection where the right lane remains the
same size, position your motorcycle right of centre in the curb lane,
make your right turn into the first available driving lane, then shoulder
check and move back to the proper blocking position to the left of the
centre of the lane.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 63 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Making a proper left turn
Steps to making a properly blocked left turn:
1. Ride in the correct blocking position for the street you are
travelling on. As you approach the intersection, make the necessary
lane changes so that you’re in the left blocking position of the left lane.
2. In the left lane make your turn while maintaining the left blocking
position throughout the turn.
3. After completing the turn, move to the correct blocking position of
the street you turned onto.
Position 6
Proper position for multi-lane streets
To ensure you are most visible to oncoming traffic when preparing to
make a left turn, shoulder check to the left to ensure your lane is clear
and move slightly to the left, close to the centre line, before making the
turn. Maintain this position throughout the turn. Once the left turn is
complete, shoulder check to the right to make sure your lane is clear
and move slightly to the right of the centre of the lane to resume proper
blocking position.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 64 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Position 6A
Proper position for single-lane streets
When making a left turn to and from a single-lane street, the proper
position is to start and end your turn slightly to the left of the centre of
the lane. Maintain this position throughout and as you complete the
turn.
The best protection a rider can have is distance – distance between the
rider and other people’s mistakes. Keeping plenty of space around you
gives you two things:
time to react to trouble
some place to go
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 65 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 66 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
REFERENCES
https://cse.google.com/cse?q=MOVE+AND+POSITION+VEHICLE&sa=Search&ie
=UTF-8&cx=partner%2Dpub-3317167162609756%3A3134777453#%9C
https://www.sgi.sk.ca/motorcycle/-/knowledge_base/motorcycle-handbook/turning-po
sition
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 67 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
SELF CHECK 2.3-1
READ THE INSTUCTION CAREFULLY; The answers are provided for each of the
following ( ESSAY)
1. Explain the 3 steps in vehicle checking on your own understanding. 10 points.
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 68 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
ANSWER KEY 2.3-1
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 69 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
Task Sheet 2.3-2
Title: Check Vehicle position
Performance Objectives: Distinguish on how to position the
vehicle
Equipment: Jeep
Steps / Procedure:
1. Ride in the correct blocking position for the street you are
travelling on. As you approach the intersection, make the
necessary lane changes so that you’re in the left blocking
position of the left lane.
2. In the left lane make your turn while maintaining the left
blocking position throughout the turn.
3. After completing the turn, move to the correct blocking position
of the street you turned onto.
Assessment Method: Questioning/Interview
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 70 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer
PERFORMANCE CRITERIA CHECKLIST LO2.3-2
CRITERIA YES NO
Did you . . .
1. 1. Ride in the correct blocking position for
the street you are travelling on. As
you approach the intersection, make the
necessary lane changes so that you’re in
the left blocking position of the left lane?
2. 2. In the left lane make your turn while
maintaining the left blocking position
throughout the turn
3. After completing the turn, move to the
correct blocking position of the street you
turned onto
CBLM Developed by: Document No. DRV-PTC-32-002-20
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
DRIVING NCII Date Developed: Issued by:
TESDA,PTC-Kalinga
Common Competency March 7, 2018
UC 2-Moving and Date Revised: Page 71 of 59
Position Vehicle Revised By: 1st Revision - 06/29, 2020
Lea Liberty A. Wangag
Trainer