👀 Situational Awareness for Children
A calm, memorable system for kids: Green / Amber / Red thinking, safe zones, and spotting odd behaviour — plus advanced drills that build confidence (not fear).
What “Situational Awareness” Means (Kid-Friendly)
Situational awareness means noticing what’s going on around you so you can make safe choices early. It’s not about being scared — it’s about being ready.
🧠 The 4 skills we train
- Notice: who is near you, where you are, what feels “off”.
- Distance: keep space from unknown adults and vehicles.
- Decision: Green/Amber/Red choice.
- Do: step back, shout, run to a safe adult/place, tell.
The Green / Amber / Red System
🟢 GREEN (Safe)
Normal. Stay aware, stay near trusted adults, keep personal space.
- Trusted adult present
- Busy/public place
- No secrecy or pressure
- People respect your space
🟠 AMBER (Caution)
Something is odd. Create distance and move toward safety early.
- Unknown adult approaches alone
- Personal questions (“where do you live?”)
- “Help me / come here”
- Vehicle slows/stops near you
🔴 RED (Danger)
Immediate action: noise + movement + run-to + tell.
- Blocking your path
- Touching/grabbing/pulling
- Trying to move you somewhere
- Secrecy threats (“don’t tell”)
✅ The simple rule children remember
If it feels weird → I leave and tell.
Kids don’t need proof before leaving. Leaving early is smart.
Safe Zones (Run-To Places)
Teach run-to targets (places with adults/staff, cameras, and other people).
🏪 Shop Counter / Reception
Safest default target.
Child script: “I feel unsafe. Can you help me call my parent/police?”
🏫 School Office / Teacher
Known safeguarding route.
Child script: “Someone followed me / spoke to me. I need help.”
🚍 Busy public spot
Bus station, library desk, community centre.
Rule: move toward people, not away from them.
🗺️ Make a “3 Safe Zones Map”
- Pick 3 safe zones used often (home route, school, clubs).
- Walk the route with your child once.
- Practice entering and asking for help (calm drill).
- Repeat monthly. Short practice beats big lectures.
Spotting “Odd Behaviour”
We teach behaviours (not stereotypes): danger can look normal.
🧍 Too Close / Matching You
Someone stays inside your personal space or follows your changes.
Action: step away, move toward adults/staff.
🚗 Vehicle Red Flags
Car slows/stops, driver calls you over, repeats a pass.
Action: don’t approach vehicles — run-to safety.
🔒 Secrecy / Pressure
“Don’t tell” / “quickly” / “you’ll get in trouble.”
Action: leave immediately and tell.
🛑 Boundary language practice
Start with this:
Stop. I don’t like that.
Then step back and go to a safe adult/place.
Interactive Trainer: Green / Amber / Red
Pick the colour. You’ll get instant feedback and what to do next.
Advanced Drills (Confidence Builders)
Short drills build fast habits. These make the system “stick”.
🫧 Distance Bubble
If someone enters your space, you step back to keep your safety buffer.
👁 Spot the Body Language
Someone scans around, stands too close, and keeps matching your direction.
💓 Body Signals
Your body may notice danger early (tight tummy, fast heart).
⏱ 5-Second Decision Drill
Start it. Choose quickly. Speed matters in safety decisions.
Knowledge Check (10 Questions)
Wrong answers show a clear explanation and what to do instead.
Key Message for Children
If it feels weird → I leave and tell.
Distance → Voice → Run-to → Tell.

