While it may be reasonable that all students in the town of Centerville should take driver's education course, the author's argument does not make a cogent case for it. To support this recommendation the writer cites the following facts regarding the Centerville: (1) recently several accidents recorded which involved teenage drivers; (2) parents are too busy to teach their children how to drive; and (3) some parents cannot pay for driving instruction. Close scrutiny of each of these facts, however, reveals that none of them lend credible support to the recommendation.
The author bases her contention partly on the fact that several accidents happened by teenage drivers. However, the author provides no evidence that how many accidents have been happened and which percent of them were the teenagers fault and also how many of these teenagers are students at high schools. Because if they are not students, having especial course for teaching driving cannot tackle the problem. In addition, if it is considered that there is sufficient accident that cause teenagers mistakes, is should be determined that are they do not know how to drive, or it is based on their psychological problem that usually people in the early ages tend to drive fast and carelessly. Thus, presenting that just some accidents involved teenage drivers does not mean that they required to learn how to drive.
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Nevertheless, the writer have not shown that how many parents are busy to teach their children and also regarding that what proportion of teenagers who involved the accidents and it was their fault, had not though by their