There are plenty of courses. Just don't ask which is the best. People have only taken one course with one company, so no one can judge which is the best. find out which ones have the perks that work for you...IE convenient times/locations, bike selections etc...they all have a minimum student to instructor ratio and all pretty much teach the same curriculum with some variances.
The problem is sometimes in the curriculum variances.
The course I went on, seemed to fail a lot of people.
Some would think that's a bad thing, but I found it kind of refreshing.
My next door neighbor took a different course,
and claimed that one person had crashed so badly,
that they waived half the test for the rest of them.
That wouldn't be the course that I'd want to be on.
I'm old enough now that I want to actually learn something,
not just pass and get the piece of paper.
If a course is just going to pass everyone,
then it's wasting my time and money.
Like it or not, some people need additional training,
and others just aren't meant to ride a motorcycle.
It could be worse. It could be the dealership trying to sell you a bike,
and then teach you to ride it at the same time.
