MAKING
THE FIRST DAY EASIER
- Remind your child that she is not the
only student who is a bit uneasy about the first day of school. Teachers know that
students are anxious and will make an extra effort to make sure everyone feels as
comfortable as possible.
- Point out the positive aspects of
starting school: It will be fun. She'll see old friends and meet new ones. Refresh her
memory about previous years, when she may have returned home after the first day with high
spirits because she had a good time.
- Find another child in the
neighborhood with whom your youngster can walk to school or ride with on the bus.
- If you feel it is appropriate, drive
your child (or walk with her) to school and pick her up on the first day.
BACKPACK SAFETY
- Choose a backpack with wide, padded
shoulder straps and a padded back.
- Pack light. Organize the backpack to
use all of its compartments. Pack heavier items closest to the center of the back. The
backpack should never weigh more than 10 to 20 percent of the student's body weight.
- Always use both shoulder straps.
Slinging a backpack over one shoulder can strain muscles.
- Consider a rolling backpack. This
type of backpack may be a good choice for students who must tote a heavy load. Remember
that rolling backpacks still must be carried up stairs, and they may be difficult to roll
in snow.
TRAVELING TO
AND FROM SCHOOL
Review the basic rules with your youngster:
School Bus
- If your childs school bus has
lap/shoulder seat belts, make sure your child uses one at all times when in the bus. If
your childs school bus does not have lap/shoulder belts, encourage the school to buy
or lease buses with lap/shoulder belts.
- Wait for the bus to stop before
approaching it from the curb.
- Do not move around on the bus.
- Check to see that no other traffic is
coming before crossing.
- Make sure to always remain in clear
view of the bus driver.
Car
- All passengers should wear a seat
belt and/or an age- and size-appropriate car safety seat or booster seat.
- Your child should ride in a car
safety seat with a harness as long as possible and then ride in a belt-positioning booster
seat. Your child is ready for a booster seat when she has reached the top weight or height
allowed for her seat, her shoulders are above the top harness slots, or her ears have
reached the top of the seat.
- Your child should ride in a
belt-positioning booster seat until the vehicle's seat belt fits properly (usually when
the child reaches about 4' 9" in height and is between 8 to 12 years of age). This
means the shoulder belt lies across the middle of the chest and shoulder, not the neck or
throat; the lap belt is low and snug across the thighs, not the stomach; and the child is
tall enough to sit against the vehicle seat back with her legs bent at the knees and feet
hanging down.
- All children under 13 years of age
should ride in the rear seat of vehicles. If you must drive more children than can fit in
the rear seat (when carpooling, for example), move the front-seat passengers seat as
far back as possible and have the child ride in a booster seat if the seat belts do not
fit properly without it.
- Remember that many crashes occur
while novice teen drivers are going to and from school. You should limit the number of
teen passengers to prevent driver distraction; this is even required by law in many
states. Do not allow your teen to drive while eating, drinking, or talking on a cell
phone.
Bike
- Always wear a bicycle helmet, no
matter how short or long the ride.
- Ride on the right, in the same
direction as auto traffic.
- Use appropriate hand signals.
- Respect traffic lights and stop
signs.
- Wear bright color clothing to
increase visibility.
- Know the "rules of the
road."
Walking to School
- Make sure your child's walk to a
school is a safe route with well-trained adult crossing guards at every intersection.
- Be realistic about your child's
pedestrian skills. Because small children are impulsive and less cautious around traffic,
carefully consider whether or not your child is ready to walk to school without adult
supervision.
- Bright colored clothing will make
your child more visible to drivers.
EATING DURING
THE SCHOOL DAY
- Most schools regularly send schedules
of cafeteria menus home. With this advance information, you can plan on packing lunch on
the days when the main course is one your child prefers not to eat.
- Try to get your child's school to
stock healthy choices such as fresh fruit, low-fat dairy products, water and 100 percent
fruit juice in the vending machines.
- Each 12-ounce soft drink contains
approximately 10 teaspoons of sugar and 150 calories. Drinking just one can of soda a day
increases a child's risk of obesity by 60%. Restrict your child's soft drink consumption.
BULLYING
Bullying is when one child picks on another child repeatedly. Bullying can be
physical, verbal, or social. It can happen at school, on the playground, on the school
bus, in the neighborhood, or over the Internet.
When Your Child Is Bullied
- Help your child learn how to respond
by teaching your child how to:
1. Look the bully in the eye.
2. Stand tall and stay calm in a difficult situation.
3. Walk away.
- Teach your child how to say in a firm
voice.
1. "I don't like what you are doing."
2. "Please do NOT talk to me like that."
3. "Why would you say that?"
- Teach your child when and how to ask
for help.
- Encourage your child to make friends
with other children.
- Support activities that interest your
child.
- Alert school officials to the
problems and work with them on solutions.
- Make sure an adult who knows about
the bullying can watch out for your child's safety and well-being when you cannot be
there.
When Your Child
Is the Bully
- Be sure your child knows that
bullying is never OK.
- Set firm and consistent limits on
your child's aggressive behavior.
- Be a positive role mode. Show
children they can get what they want without teasing, threatening or hurting someone.
- Use effective, non-physical
discipline, such as loss of privileges.
- Develop practical solutions with the
school principal, teachers, counselors, and parents of the children your child has
bullied.
When Your Child
Is a Bystander
- Tell your child not to cheer on or
even quietly watch bullying.
- Encourage your child to tell a
trusted adult about the bullying.
- Help your child support other
children who may be bullied. Encourage your child to include these children in activities.
- Encourage your child to join with
others in telling bullies to stop.
BEFORE AND
AFTER SCHOOL CHILD CARE
- During middle childhood, youngsters
need supervision. A responsible adult should be available to get them ready and off to
school in the morning and watch over them after school until you return home from work.
- Children approaching adolescence (11-
and 12-year-olds) should not come home to an empty house in the afternoon unless they show
unusual maturity for their age.
- If alternate adult supervision is not
available, parents should make special efforts to supervise their children from a
distance. Children should have a set time when they are expected to arrive at home and
should check in with a neighbor or with a parent by telephone.
- If you choose a commercial
after-school program, inquire about the training of the staff. There should be a high
staff-to-child ratio, and the rooms and the playground should be safe.
DEVELOPING GOOD
HOMEWORK AND STUDY HABITS
- Create an environment that is
conducive to doing homework. Youngsters need a permanent work space in their bedroom or
another part of the home that offers privacy.
- Set aside ample time for homework.
- Establish a household rule that the
TV set stays off during homework time.
- Be available to answer questions and
offer assistance, but never do a child's homework for her.
- Take steps to help alleviate eye
fatigue, neck fatigue and brain fatigue while studying. It may be helpful to close the
books for a few minutes, stretch, and take a break periodically when it will not be too
disruptive.
- If your child is struggling with a
particular subject, and you aren't able to help her yourself, a tutor can be a good
solution. Talk it over with your child's teacher first.
Playgrounds
Each year, more than 200,000 kids are treated in U.S. hospital emergency rooms for
playground-associated injuries. Most of these injuries occur when a child falls from the
equipment. Take a look at the surfaces of your local playground. There should be a 12-inch
depth of wood chips, mulch, sand, or pea gravel, or mats made of safety-tested rubber or
fiber material. (This surface will prevent possible head injuries in case a child falls.)
Here are more tips for checking the safety of public playgrounds. Bike Helmets
Since a growing number of kids are riding their bikes to school, make sure your kids
always wear their helmets. All bike helmets manufactured or sold in the U.S. are required
to meet federal safety standards. Helmet use can reduce the risk of head injury by up to
85 percent. There is one exception: Kids shouldn't wear bike helmets when playing --
especially on playground equipment.
Backpacks
Textbooks, notebooks, lunch, toys... how much weight is your child toting back and forth
each day? Take the load off your child by following these backpack safety tips.
Soccer
Many people don't associate soccer with injury. One source of trouble is the soccer goal.
To prevent soccer goals from tipping over, make sure they're anchored into the ground. You
can use the following:
- auger-style anchors that screw into the ground;
- semi-permanent anchors, which require a permanently secured base that
is buried underground combined with the use of tethers or bolts to secure the goal;
- peg, stake, or j-hook style anchors that are driven into the ground;
or
- sandbags or counterweights if the goals are indoors.
Jacket and Sweatshirt Drawstrings
Drawstrings may look trendy, but they can get caught on lots of stuff, including
elevators, playground equipment, and cribs. Remove drawstrings on hoods or around the neck
of clothing. If drawstrings at the waist or bottom of an article of clothing are looking a
tad long, trim them down to no longer than three inches.
Loops on Window Blind Cords
Look at the blinds in your house, or at your child's daycare or school. You or the teacher
should cut the loop on two-corded horizontal blinds and attach separate tassels to keep
kids from getting entangled in the cords. Vertical blinds, continuous loop systems, and
drapery cords use looped cords to function. Do not cut these loops. Instead, install a
permanent tie-down device.
© 2008 - American Academy of
Pediatrics |