How to Teach Your Kids Children Safety Rules

AllsWell Team

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Childhood years are an exciting adventure for little ones. And as a loving parent, you want them not to misstep and make it through with a cheery smile. Therefore, growing a kiddo’s awareness of personal safety habits is essential.

Practicing children’s safety rules is no big deal. Yet, teaching kids to follow them depends on how you deliver the message. Learn how to explain the main ideas of children’s safety to preschoolers here.

Why It’s Important to Teach Kids Personal Safety?

Try to recall being a kid. We bet there were a lot of temptations and pressure from the same-agers daring you to break the rules. Sometimes you managed to get away without a scratch. But other times, you risked too much.

Like you back in the day, your kids are easily influenced by peers. That makes it difficult for them to distinguish good from bad and dangerous from benign. As a result, children often overlook risks and get in trouble.

Therefore, the core principle of teaching safety to preschoolers is to shape correct judgments. Kids need to realize what problems they might bring upon themselves. Educating them on personal safety is always about giving reason and, to a large extent, being a role model.

How to Succeed in Teaching Safety to Preschoolers

To ensure your child’s safety wherever they go, you should clarify the difference between “safe” and “unsafe.” Be specific and appeal to the way they might feel about certain people and situations. Once they’ve learned how to recognize an unsafe situation, you must nurture their safety skills. These are behaviors to evade harm.

Here are several steps for teaching safety to preschoolers.

Do Not Exaggerate When You Teach Your Kid 

There’s no point in scaring a child. Don’t try to frighten them with nonsense like they will get eaten by alligators if they go swimming right there if you know they won’t. In such a way, you’ll either undermine your credibility or, what’s worse, make a child grow into an over-anxious person. Thus, telling the truth is always better.

Teach your child about bad people

The idea of strangers is too abstract to teach preschoolers how to stay safe with older kids or adults. Children might misinterpret the intentions of somebody they consider trustworthy since they are their neighbor, teacher, or family member. And shocking statistics confirm it – in 93% of child sexual abuse cases, a perpetrator turned up an acquaintance or relative.

The right way would be to educate your kiddo about someone’s inappropriate behavior:

  • Clarify what’s the difference between good touch and bad touch. Be specific and explain that nobody is allowed to touch their private parts.

  • Explain what kids shouldn’t tolerate. For instance, someone makes them feel uncomfortable and embarrassed. Or maybe the person continues to be physical with the child despite their protests.

  • Ask the child to be careful with favors. Suppose a stranger is too clingy or offers goodies in exchange for a favor. In that case, the right thing to do is to stay away.

The ability to distinguish good from bad is life-critical. Moreover, it helps children to remain more selective about social interactions as they grow older. They will likely opt for safer dating and solo traveling when they come of age.

Advise Children to Trust Their Gut Instinct

You should ask kids to recall the situations when they were confused, scared, or uncomfortable in some way. Looking back at such an unpleasant experience will give them insight into when to seek help or stop doing what they’re doing. Don’t push on the little one and talk over these emotionally disturbing moments in a comfortable, homey atmosphere.

It’s good to clarify safety tips for kids and explain why these to-does and do-nots exist. They’ll likely follow your precautions when they detect something is not OK about a particular situation.

Do Safety Rehearsals

Play safety games to get your kids involved and entertained simultaneously. This will encourage them to demonstrate their knowledge and readiness to act. 

Start with some simple cases. Ask them what they would do when someone knocks on a door. Or what they need to do when someone they don’t know comes to the daycare and says they’ll take them home.

Then talk over some cases of emergency they might encounter. For instance, what should they do if they get lost in a mall? Or how should they act when smoke detectors go off?

Such a quiz game can be puzzling for a child at first. You can give two or three answer options to help them. Be an attentive and patient listener. Even if your offspring come up with a silly answer, you can praise them for the brightness and offer a more suitable solution.

5 Safety Tips for Kids that Every Parent Should Follow

The tips listed below are pretty universal. For specific children’s safety measures, check our prior articles on safe outdoor activities during heat and protection from home safety hazards.

Here are five suggestions for parents and preschoolers to provide them with safe and stress-free living.

  1. Mutual trust is at the core of children’s safety. Teach kids to share their worries and complaints with you. Convince them that they shouldn’t keep it to themselves even if they’ve done something wrong. Never punish them for what they did by mistake or regret doing.

  2. Update kids on new safety hazards. Little ones grow up quickly, so you must consistently reassess the risks they can face. Primarily it implies teaching children how to stay out of trouble at home and on playgrounds. Later it comes to ensuring their road safety when they try cycling around the block for the first time, etc.

  3. Stay in touch with kids while being apart. Schedule time for phone calls or text messages to check in on a kid. It is vital when they stay without your attendance at summer camps, under the surveillance of a relative or a babysitter.

  4. Provide your kiddo with a personal safety device. GPS trackers for children are an unobtrusive safety solution to track kids. A geofence feature restrains kids from wandering near unsafe areas. Moreover, with the panic button feature, they can immediately inform you in an emergency.

  5. Define trusted emergency contacts. It’s one of the vital safety tips for kids and parents. The emergency services might not be as quick as you expect. That’s why you should preselect a reliable and mobile person who will care for a child in distress.

AllsWell to Keep All Family Members Safe

With the AllsWell Alert app, your children can request help from adults at no time. It provides simple and unobtrusive personal safety tracking features suitable for all ages. You can use it to increase the personal safety of underaged, grown-ups, and seniors.

AllsWell Alert app provides:

  • Instant emergency notifications with geo tag

  • SOS alerts sent with an in-app panic button and inactivity monitoring

  • Multiple emergency contacts support

  • Global coverage.

You and your family can benefit from AllsWell Alert today by downloading it from Google Play or AppStore. New subscribers get a free 30-day trial and can proceed to a paid subscription for only $9.99 per month.

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