pre school fire education material for parents

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Oddly we may seem to young to train or teach, but fire never thinks we are not young to burn!

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Page 1: Pre school fire education material for parents

Oddly we may seem to young to train or teach, but fire never thinks

we are not young to burn!

Page 2: Pre school fire education material for parents

Fire Education

Fire Education starts with a partnership

• Parents

• Community

• Resources/Groups

• And Fire Agencies

Page 3: Pre school fire education material for parents

A lot of time with mom or care giver

Most fire prevention books and items are made for the school age kids including reading some of the simpler words and items.

• And fact most pre-school fire education items are left in the hands of mom or the caregivers to teach and it is usually in short supply or very limited like don’t touch. Sadly we are failing in the world of start them young to prevent! Roughly seven people die every day in the U.S. as a result of home fires. Kids under the age of five have a much higher risk of dying in a residential fire compared to children in other age groups.

Page 4: Pre school fire education material for parents

To Young to Read but not be read with!

A wonderful way to introduce fire safety is with books and literature. We often begin our real world discussions by sitting down with a good book during our circle time. There are plenty of developmentally appropriate books that explore fire drills, fire trucks, and overall fire safety. When we explore a concept in preschool, it is fun to take home a reminder of what we learned.

Page 5: Pre school fire education material for parents

What about your local partnerships

Are fire services teaching preschoolers fire safety and if so is the message sticking with the little ones who need it the most? How do we even know what the learning outcomes are using the materials we have available to us as educators? In my experience as a fire chief (retired now), usually these materials are in short supply or very limited, like don’t touch we don’t have enough.• When we say we are teaching them young, mostly the

preschool fire education items we use anyways are handouts left in the hands of parents or the caregivers to reinforce the message back at home. So this is prime-time to educate kids together with the adults in their lives.

Page 6: Pre school fire education material for parents

Yes and NO and Dont

• If we are not teaching preschoolers fire safety then sadly we are failing in the world of starting them young to prevent!

• Young children can understand “Stop” or “No”, but they cannot understand “Do not run onto the street because you will get hit by a car”. They are too busy concentrating on running without falling over, and anyway, they did not get hit by a car last time they ran on the road.

Page 7: Pre school fire education material for parents

Why the SAFE Environment

• Because they are too young to take care of their own safety;• Because they cannot understand danger, and;• Because a parent just telling them about danger, while important, does not always keep them safe.• Keeping young children safe is an adults responsibility

so as educators we want to see parents and caregivers staying with their preschoolers for their fire safety lessons. When in fact most fire and life safety education programs are geared towards the school age kids, its the kids under the age of five who have a much higher risk of dying in a residential fire compared to children in other age groups.

Page 8: Pre school fire education material for parents

Understanding the Risks Around You

• Young children cannot understand danger. They cannot understand that they might get hurt or even killed even when you have told them about the danger.

• Young children can understand “Stop” or “No”, but they cannot understand “Do not run onto the street because you will get hit by a car”. They are too busy concentrating on running without falling over, and anyway, they did not get hit by a car last time they ran on the road.

• Toddlers may understand “no” but they may not have learned to obey it yet.

• Young children only look at where they are going to (chasing a ball, running to a friend) – they have ‘tunnel vision’.

• They cannot judge whether something, such as a car, is moving, or how fast it is moving.

Page 9: Pre school fire education material for parents

FACT

It is a fact that young kids aren’t as capable of exiting a home on their own or understanding the dangers of fire risks.

Page 10: Pre school fire education material for parents

When is too much dangerous

Preschool-age children are at greater risk for home fire deaths and burns. Yes their developmental capabilities make learning about fire safety particularly challenging. Fire safety education is always done with the best intentions, but if we do not understand how preschoolers learn, we might be doing them more harm than good.

Page 11: Pre school fire education material for parents
Page 12: Pre school fire education material for parents

Key word MUST

Parents must take extra precautions to reduce fire risk in the home, including installing fire safety equipment and preparing comprehensive safety and evacuation plans to ensure children escape safely. Children of between the ages of 3-5 generally lack the mental faculties to understand the need and the means of quickly escaping from a burning structure. Even in their own homes, very young children lack an understanding of how to escape.

Page 13: Pre school fire education material for parents

{Physiological}

Physiologically, young children are susceptible to severe injury or death from fire.• A young child’s skin is quite thin and delicate compared to that of

adults and older children. As a result, young children suffer burns more quickly and easily than adults. In addition, smoke inhalation from the toxic gases released by fires (and often in conjunction with burns suffered in the fires.

• For parents, the dangers of fire are so apparent that the sight of a child anywhere near a flame is enough to send them scrambling. And fortunately, most kids are wary of fire and understand that it can hurt them and others. But it’s not unusual for kids to be curious about fire, too. After all, we enjoy campfires and singing over birthday candles. That’s why it’s so important to educate kids about the dangers of fire and to keep them away from matches, lighters, and other fire-starting tools.

Page 14: Pre school fire education material for parents

Even the basic is Important!

Page 15: Pre school fire education material for parents

Yes it Can and Has Happened

Heavy smoke and poisonous gases accumulate first near the ceiling. Teach toddlers to crouch low or crawl through rooms and hallways under the smoke to reduce exposure as much as possible. If you're navigating your escape route with a baby, hold the infant securely under your body with one arm.

Page 16: Pre school fire education material for parents

Your Best Efforts and Intentions

• Even with the best efforts from parents, kids might play with fire. Most of the time this can be handled by explaining the dangers and setting clear ground rules and consequences for not following them.

• For most adults, knowing to get out of a house on fire comes as second nature. But children respond in just the opposite way. To escape fire, they often try to hide under a bed, in a closet, or behind furniture. They even hide from the firefighters trying to save them. When you look at things from a child’s point of view, it’s easier to understand their actions. Appropriate supervision and visual guidance ( like show and tell) of children, especially the youngest, is one of the most effective means of preventing injury or death from all sources.

Page 17: Pre school fire education material for parents
Page 18: Pre school fire education material for parents

Someone who looks scary

Most home fires start at night when everyone is sleeping. When awakened, kids are groggy and confused. Smoke fogs their vision, which is made even worse by coughing and watering eyes. Plus, fire is loud, blindingly bright, swift moving, and frightening.• When firefighters enter into a burning home, they’re in full

protective gear, including face masks and oxygen tanks. They may have an ax or fire hose. Firefighters breathing into masks sound frightening, not all that different from Darth Vadar of the movie “Star Wars.”

• To further complicate matters, a young child’s logical thinking hasn’t matured. To them, out of sight means out of harm’s reach. They falsely believe that not seeing fire means it can’t find them. Those factors combine to put kids at greater risk of dying in a house fire than an adult.

Page 19: Pre school fire education material for parents

Simple is best to start!

Remember.• When a house fire starts, children can become very afraid and

confused. They may not understand what is happening or how they should react.

• With as little as two minutes to escape unharmed they must know how to crawl low to the ground with their mouths covered if there is smoke and to feel for a hot door before exiting a room.

• Teach children never to hide from firefighters.• Teach children to NEVER return to a burning building.• Children’s sleepwear is required to be flame-resistant or snug

fitting. Only allow your children to sleep in pajamas, not “day wear,” such as T-shirts or sweatpants.

• Teach children to STOP, DROP, COVER THEIR FACE and ROLL if their clothing catches on fire.

Page 20: Pre school fire education material for parents

So what other tools

There are certain life safety skills to develop as adults who are dealing with young children. Make the learning active and participatory; keep the lessons short, but repeat them to reinforce the key concepts; and check on how well the children remember what they learned. This is particularly important if you are teaching two different behaviors in combination, such as “get low and go” or “stop, drop, and roll.”

Page 21: Pre school fire education material for parents

Show and Tell not Feel and Hurt

• The stove is HOT – the fire place and fire pit is HOT = We don’t touch hot things – out of the kitchen when mom is carrying something to the sink – the water is HOT.

• As parents, caregivers, daycare and preschool teachers we all should learn how to teach our child to respect fire or heat when they are very young at home. In a two story window we can get purchase escape ladders that attach to the window sill on the outside and can be opened easily.

Page 22: Pre school fire education material for parents

Learn like the child not the adult!

Being able to identify basic learning characteristics and having knowledge of how preschooler learns is critical so here are more things to ask your local fire department about so you know:

Page 23: Pre school fire education material for parents

They CAN if you teach themThe learning characteristics of 3-5 year olds:

• a) They learn by seeing and doing.b) They model parents and adults in their life.c) They have predictable fears.d) They cannot distinguish fantasy from reality (that’s why Sparky is so successful in helping teach fire safety.)

Page 24: Pre school fire education material for parents

Grow with age and knowledge

Instructional methods to use when working with 3-5 year olds:• a) Get down on their level (sit on floor or in

chair.)b) Use only positive behaviors (do not use fear.)c) Active repetition.d) Teach 1 behavior and NO MORE than 20 minutes.e) Use words that are on the child’s level. Example: hot, hurt, burn, not words like apparatus, gear and dispatch.

Page 25: Pre school fire education material for parents

Explain make it fun!

Examples of appropriate activities for preschoolers:• a) Flannel board activity for exit drills at the school.

b) Puppet or clown show about fire safety.c) A “Follow the Leader” game that teaches crawling low in smoke.d) Using a picture game to identify burn hazards.e) Using toys and objects to represent potential burn hazards.f) Using music and songs to convey a burn safety message.g) Demonstrate “Stop, drop, and roll” and have kids repeat.

Page 26: Pre school fire education material for parents

No REGIMENTED fire program

• Toy firetrucks that make sounds and firefighter hats to wear!• Ask the children to tell of some places where they have seen fire.

Show them the pictures you have brought. Ask them how each of these fires would be started. Explain that some fires are used for heat or for fun things and some are more dangerous.

• Lead the children in a discussion of fire safety. Ask what they know about how to stay safe from fire.

• Do you know where we would go to be safe if there was a fire? Let me show you. (Walk to the door or window and point to your safety spot). We would all WALK together to that spot and wait for the firefighters (at our school, it was a tree across from the parking lot). Let's take a walk over to the spot and check it out! There is NO fire and the fire fighters are NOT coming, we're just going to check out our safety spot (we called it our Fire Tree).

Page 27: Pre school fire education material for parents

Simple Masters FUN in Teaching

Explain to the children that if there was ever fire on their clothing, they should:• 1. Stop Moving• 2. Drop to the Ground.• 3. Roll on the ground, covering their faces, on the part of the body

that has fire.• Place a felt flame on your own sleeve and demonstrate.• Now ask a child to place a felt flame on YOUR back. Say "Oh no,

there is fire on my back! What should I do boys and girls?"• They will say stop, drop and roll, hopefully, or you can encourage

that! And then--be sure to stop, drop and roll!• Most children will want to try this once you have demonstrated a

few times!

Page 28: Pre school fire education material for parents

If you have Questions

If you have questions call your local fire agency they can assist you in HELPING teach these topics!