Be warned: as others have indicated, this is a terrible driving school -- stay away, and unless you have no other option, spend your time and money elsewhere! We chose Beauséjour because we wanted French instruction and because it was convenient to us in Shediac. We put both my son and daughter through this program. My daughter did fine, but that's 100% because she's a natural driver (she could already drive very well from the first time we tried, before any in-car sessions with the school), and the instructor assigned to her (Maurice) was the only instructor they seem to have at this school that has the patience and knowledge to do it right (not kidding on this). Unfortunately Maurice is out during Covid due to health risks. Unlike my daughter, my son is not a natural driver. When he went through this program, for his first in-car he was instructed to drive on a two-lane, 110 km/hr undivided highway with oncoming traffic (again, not kidding). We quickly requested they choose another instructor who can make smarter choices and provide better instruction. That seemed better, but they forgot things, still didn't provide proper instruction nor have the patience to do so, and the end result shows that they just force someone through the motions and try to check all of their boxes showing that it's all good. In my son's case, it is not. A good school would have instructors who suggest more lessons would be a good idea rather than encourage him to go for his test when he is not comfortable/doesn't feel ready. A good school wouldn't have completely forgotten to teach parallel parking to him, and then just fudge it in the end to pretend they did. A good school with competent instructors would recognize when a French student doesn't speak slang/chiac, and recognize when someone isn't comfortable with the instruction, and adjust their training accordingly, speaking a proper French and take time to explain what is needed. Even in the end, when my son decided to pay for a few more hours to increase his comfort level, he requested Maurice, but found out that he couldn't get him, and the other instructor provided terrible training. Poor communication and poor instruction from poor instructors (save one). In one-on-one training sessions, instructors must able to adapt to the needs of different students, and help them succeed. This school's instructors failed in every aspect of that.