FACTSHEET
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Sept. 3, 2010
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Ministry of Education
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BACK TO SCHOOL
TIPS TO KEEP STUDENTS SAFE
All Students and Parents:
- Ensure your children always wear a helmet
and other protective gear when playing sports, riding their bikes, using
scooters or skateboarding. Ensure helmets fit properly and that your
children secure the chin strap every time they go for a ride.
- Drivers are reminded to watch their speed
in school zones to ensure safe pedestrian traffic. Starting Monday, Sept
20, new changes to the Motor Vehicle Act will trigger a seven-day
impoundment of your car if you’re caught speeding 40 km or more over the
posted speed limit!
Primary Students:
- Find a safe route to and from school and
practise it with your children.
- Join an existing Walking School Bus or
Bicycle Train, or start up your own with other parents in your
neighbourhood. Visit http://www.dashbc.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=57&Itemid=80
- Identify safe places along the route,
such as a friend’s house, where your children can go if they encounter
trouble.
- Discuss how to safely interact with
strangers: www.safekidsbc.ca/parent_street_proofing.htm
- Ensure your children understand traffic
safety, such as how to cross the street, board the school bus and what to
do and whom to contact in the event of a natural disaster.
- If your child has anaphylaxis, coordinate
with the school principal on an updated emergency plan that best meets
your child’s needs.
Intermediate/Middle Students:
- Help your children pack their backpacks,
and ensure their backpacks weigh no more than 10 to 20 per cent of their
body weight.
- Make sure
your children use both shoulder straps when carrying their backpacks.
Slinging a backpack over one shoulder can strain muscles and may even
increase the curvature of their spines.
- Discuss your children’s safe route to
school and ensure it is still effective. Note any changes in safe stops,
such as friends moving to or from the neighbourhood.
- Talk to your children about appropriate
school behaviour, and remind them what to do and whom to talk to if they
encounter bullying, including online bullying.
- Help your children understand how to
safely use the Internet and how to protect their privacy.
Secondary Students:
- Talk to your teenagers about being safe
drivers and passengers. Let them know it is okay to say “no” to getting
into a car with someone they feel is an unsafe driver.
- Encourage your teens to talk to you about
issues that are important to them, including peer pressure, drugs and
alcohol, and healthy sexual decision making.
- Let your teenagers grow and help provide
them with a sense of confidence. This is the best defence against peer
pressure.
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This factsheet is available in French at:
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/news/docs/2010/tips-safety_fr.pdf
In Chinese at:
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/news/docs/2010/tips-safety_ch.pdf
In Punjabi at:
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/news/docs/2010/tips-safety_pu.pdf
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Media Contact:
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Public Affairs Bureau
Ministry of Education
250 356-5963
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