Okay With My Grown-Up In Charge
(This rule is so important you will probably need 2 lessons. It can be split up however you feel will work best in your classroom.)
Educational Goals/Objectives
- Children should be able to understand the importance of always staying together with a buddy. There is safety in numbers.
- Children should be able to understand the importance of always asking the grown-up in charge for permission before engaging in certain behaviors.
When thinking about perpetrators of CSA, many people picture an image of a creepy stranger. parents and schools generally do a pretty good job of teaching their kids about “stranger danger.” However, this is not where most of the danger lies. The vast majority of SA’ers are known to the children they target, so it is incumbent upon us to teach kids not only how to respond when an uncomfortable or dangerous situation rises, but also how to recognize when danger is approaching.
Below you will find the specific rules, which must be taught as a standard to follow in all situations. Telling a child that certain individuals, such as grandma or a close friend are okay, causes confusion, as the child may decide others are okay as well. In addition, the children should be reminded to apply the skills learned in Lesson 1 by knowing to Tell a Trusted Adult about how they felt in situations where they may have made a wrong decision as well as times when they made the correct choice of getting the Ok from their Grown-Up In Charge.