Occupant Safety & Sharing the Road
⏱ ~3-min readAceMark GuideWhat this topic is really about
Texas law requires young children to be secured in an appropriate child passenger safety seat system based on age and size, not held by an adult.
Motorcycles can decelerate quickly and are harder to judge for distance and speed, so a larger following gap gives more time to react.
See the mechanism
Texas law requires young children to be secured in an appropriate child passenger safety seat system based on age and size, not held by an adult. A diagram for this topic isn't available yet — the worked example below walks the same reasoning step by step.
An exam-style question, fully explained
Under Texas law, where must a child too small for an adult seat belt generally be secured in a child safety seat system?
- Identify what the question tests: Under Texas law, where must a child too small for an adult seat belt generally be secured in a child safety seat system.
- Texas law requires young children to be secured in an appropriate child passenger safety seat system based on age and size, not held by an adult.
- Eliminate the distractors that break the rule above, then confirm the remaining option.
Traps the examiner sets
- Cyclists are legitimate road users, and drivers should leave a safe gap and pass only when clear to avoid endangering them.
Test your recall
Answer each from memory — you'll see instantly whether you're right and why.
Run a focused 10-question mini-mock on Occupant Safety & Sharing the Road and see it stick.
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