Family rules
Establishing a system of "family rules" about personal safety can be a good way to teach children to distinguish between safe and a non-safe situations. Many families already have rules about bedtime, TV watching, chores, etc. By adopting rules about personal safety, parents can teach good habits through reinforcement and repetition without generatingexcessive fear. The following are suggestions for personal safety rules that can be incorporated into a family routine.
Inside rules
- Kids should know their complete home address, telephone number including area code and parents' first and last names.
- Kids should be taught never to reveal any personal (their name, school, age, etc.) or family information over the phone unless a parent has given permission.
- If kids are home alone and answer a phone call for an absent parent, they should say "she can't come to the phone right now", and take a message or tell the caller to try later – don't make excuses, they sound phony.
- It's okay not to answer the phone, or to work out a code (ring twice, hang up call again) so parent can check on a child that is home alone.
- Kids are old enough to answer the door when they are old enough to check the identity of the person at the door WITHOUT opening it.
- Kids should help their parents make sure doors that should be locked are locked.
Outside rules
"Bad Guy" rules
- Teach kids that "bad guys" can be anyone; society teaches kids bad guys are always ugly, mean and scary, and look like monsters. Bad guys are almost always portrayed as strangers and as men.
- Remember, a stranger is someone who is not known by the child. A friend of parents, a friend of the child's friend or a neighbor can be a stranger. And a stranger can be a good guy or a bad guy.
- Some bad guys act nice, friendly and are attractive. Some bad guys play tricks on kids. Typical bad guy tricks include bribes (money, toys, games, or promises of those things), lies (your mom told me to pick you up at school), requests for help (my puppy ran away, can you help me find him?), or threats (if you don't come with me I'll hurt your mom).
- Teach kids that a bad guy is someone who asks them to violate family rules, e.g. someone who says they don't need permission to accompany them.
- Develop a family "code word". If someone other than a parent is going to pick up a child unexpectedly, that person should repeat the "code word" first before the child agrees to leave. The code word should remain a secret and be changed should others learn of it. Schools have specific rules about “emergency pick-ups”. Please make sure you are aware of those rules and provide the school with the information needed.
|