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Youth Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety Education Curriculum Background
A comprehensive Safe Routes to School program should include bicycle and pedestrian safety education curriculum, structured for appropriate grade and age levels, which can be implemented as part of a school-wide, communitywide, or statewide program. Pedestrian safety courses or programs will be most effective with K-3rd grades, and bicycle safety courses or programs will be most effective with 4-8th grades. There are many examples of safety education curriculums currently in use in the US. Some are brief overviews such as a bicycle or traffic safety rodeo, or a class or school assembly, or a part of a ‘Safety Town’ course. Others are more intensive, providing in-depth instruction and practice sessions. The most effective curriculums are the latter, since the level of knowledge and skills needed to truly improve the ability of a child to negotiate traffic is much greater than a brief rodeo or assembly can offer. Comprehensive curriculums can sometimes be too costly for some schools and communities, so a bicycle rodeo or assembly may be an affordable solution to introduce curriculum concepts until other funds are available. Another challenge is that some schools are not willing to dedicate in-class time for bicycle or pedestrian safety classes; however, many schools have done this successfully through physical education programs, and a focus on bicycle and pedestrian safety curriculum can help to meet wellness policy requirements. Good Policies
Children should generally only be allowed to negotiate automobile traffic alone when they are around ten years old, since there are developmental barriers up to that point. Parents or older youth should accompany children younger than ten. But ultimately parents must judge a child’s readiness themselves. For this reason, parents should themselves receive bicycle and pedestrian education materials or instruction, since many do not routinely travel by bicycle or on foot and may not understand what is needed for their child to be a safe pedestrian or bicyclist in traffic. A bicycle or pedestrian safety rodeo or assembly is a one-time or annual safety event designed to engage and entertain children while providing safety skills and knowledge, and should include:
Examples
Texas Bicycle Coalition (Austin, Texas; biketexas.org) League of American Bicyclists (Washington D.C.; bikeleague.org) Bicycle Transportation Alliance (Portland, Oregon; bta4bikes.org) Marin County Safe Routes to Schools (Marin County, California; saferoutestoschools.org) Resources
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