Environmental Sciences, asked by sjsjs7259, 1 year ago

Find out the traffic rules and discuss them in the class subject in e.v.s

Answers

Answered by mahesh4668gmailcom35
5
Road safety is a great subject in which to engage children and young people – and Road Safety Week is the perfect time to do it! If approached in the right way, students often enjoy and get a lot from studying and campaigning for road safety because it is an issue they can understand and that affects them. It’s vitally important to help shape children and young people’s understanding of and attitudes towards road safety, to help give them the best chance of keeping safe while they’re young and as they get older. Road crashes are the biggest killer of young people worldwide.

Teaching road safety may be part of your country’s teaching requirements. If it isn’t, it should always be possible to incorporate road safety messages into lessons on other subjects, or assemblies, lunchtime activities, or general ‘citizenship’ or ‘wellbeing’ lessons if you have them.

Below are some guidelines on what to teach different age groups from age 2 to 18, and some ideas for lessons and activities, including some that can be incorporated into teaching on subjects like Maths, Science, Drama and English. You can also find out if your national or local authority provides help and guidance on road safety teaching, which may show you how to teach road safety within your country’s teaching requirements. You could also visit Brake’s UK road safety teaching guide for more ideas, which may need adapting for your requirements.

- Before you get started

- What to teach

- Age 2-5 teaching ideas

- Age 5-7 teaching ideas

- Age 7-11 teaching ideas

- Age 11-14 teaching ideas

- Age 14-18 teaching ideas

Before you get started

Sensitivity issues

Before teaching road safety, check if any children have been bereaved by, hurt in, or witnessed a serious road crash, and be sensitive to their needs. Talk to them and their carers about whether they wish to be excluded from lessons or activities that discuss death or injury. (If your school or any students experience a bereavement in a road crash, you can see Brake's reports on child bereavement and order our child bereavement support literature to help you support them.)

Getting everyone on board

You may need to persuade others within your school or college, particularly the head or board, about the importance of road safety before you start teaching and promoting it, and in order to organise or take part in a Road Safety Week.

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