Interactive learning to promote water safety among children

Water Safety Charts – interactive learning to promote water safety among children

With 250 children drowning in pools every year, teaching water safety at home is of paramount importance. A drowning child makes no noise. There are no cries for help, no splashing, no waving arms. You have mere seconds to get to the child in time, and more often than not, an adult won’t get there in time.

A tried and tested method is to adopt different layers of safety to protect children. Make the primary layer a safety cover such as SA’s leading safety cover, the PowerPlastics Solid Safety Cover, which creates a childproof barrier over the pool and comes with certification.

Another layer is child-friendly education, and it is an opportunity to create new games and interactive play. Creating a water safety chart that children will love involves combining engaging visuals, simple language, and interactive elements. Here’s a structured approach to designing such a chart:

Design elements – bright and colourful graphics

Use vibrant colours and fun illustrations to capture children’s attention. Images of children swimming, wearing life jackets, or playing safely near water can make the chart visually appealing.

Simple and clear messages

Include straightforward safety rules written in large, easy-to-read fonts. Examples of rules to feature:

“Always swim with an adult.”

“No running near the pool.”

“No playing on the pool cover”

“Cover the pool after swimming.”

Essential water safety rules

List fundamental safety tips in a way that’s easy for children to remember. You might consider using rhymes or catchy phrases to enhance recall:

“Look before you leap!”

“Stay where you can see!”

“Mom, swim with me!”

“No buddy, no swim.”

Illustrative scenarios

Create sections that depict various water environments (like pools, lakes, and oceans) with specific safety tips relevant to each setting. Always show a pool with a solid safety cover on it, so a pool cover becomes as normal as seatbelts in cars.  Ask them questions about what characters should do to stay safe, making the learning process fun and relatable. This helps children relate the rules to real-life situations and understand that a pool cover should always be a part of everyday life.

Child participation

Engage children in the chart creation process by allowing them to contribute their drawings or ideas for rules. This involvement fosters ownership and makes them more likely to remember the information.

Strategic placement

Place the chart in visible areas such as bathrooms, playrooms, or near swimming pools, ensuring it is at the child’s eye level for easy reference.

Incorporate storytelling

Use storytelling techniques alongside the chart by creating stories that illustrate water safety scenarios, making learning more relatable and memorable.

Games and activities

Develop games related to water safety that can be played alongside using the chart. (See the other articles in this series for a full list of games.)

By combining these elements, you can make the lessons enjoyable for children, helping them learn essential safety practices effectively while having fun. It is not a once-off exercise. Reinforce learning by revisiting water safety lessons through discussions, games, or story time to ensure that the information remains fresh in their minds. Be open and honest with children about drowning and what happens in just seconds.

Let PowerPlastics Pool Covers watch your child when you can’t.

Learn more about the bestselling safety pool cover at https://powerplastics.co.za/product-category/pool-covers/safety-covers/ 

PowerPlastics Pool Covers

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