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Home » Article » Reference-and-Education School Safety - Health and Safety in KS1 & KS2 Curriculum
Paddy Swan filed under "Reference-and-Education"
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A Headteacher's Safety Management Toolkit Article -
www.swaneducation.co.uk
Health and Safety and KS1 & KS2 Curriculum.
Government Action
The Government determined that Health and Safety become part of
the curriculum in 2002 and defined that all pupils of should
receive some 40 hours of H&S teaching before the end of their
schooling.
HSE has already produced materials which are being used to give
a Basic Safety Induction to work for pupils going out on Work
Experience from schools and colleges.
Safety has actually already entered the syllabus in a fairly
defined way and the QCA have already produced a statutory
statement and defined NVQ standards at the higher levels, which
are already used for qualifying members of the HSE Inspectorate.
DfES have also played their part through their own expert tem
and the information delivered through Teachernet. National
Curriculum for Health and Safety
The QCA statutory statement with regards to safety in the
curriculum states that it :
"applies to science, design and technology, information and
communication technology, art and design, and physical
education."
In brief the QCA has indicated that pupils must be taught the
whole range of concepts surrounding risk assessment and control
including:
*Identifying Hazards and Risks. *Controlling and reducing
hazards and risks. *Risk Assessment techniques . *To take care
for their own and other's Health and Safety.
The QCA have also issued guidance which was drawn up after
consultation with HSE and this indicates that they have a view
that RISK should be the core of the approach and they feel that
teachers will have already introduced their pupils to the
concept of risk. The whole thrust of QCA guidance tells the
teacher to ensure that pupils are taught about risk at an
appropriate level throughout their time in school. They see this
as helping to ensure that pupils are better equipped to deal
with risks with situations of uncertainty and change both in and
out of school. QCA see the main objectives of the delivery of a
Health and Safety curriculum as being a tool to ensure that the
pupils are able to: *recognise the existence of hazards, risks
and uncertainty in a range of contexts; *assess their own
ability, and the ability of others, to deal with different
situations; *assess the consequences when dealing with hazards
presented to themselves and to others (for example, within
school, the environment, the home); *seek advice from
appropriate sources to minimise and manage risk; *understand
that rules and regulations follow from risk assessment and help
define individual and collective responsibility.
In addition already part of H&S is part of the National Healthy
Schools initiative for Primary Schools.
HSE and the Curriculum HSE has set up a small Risk Education
Team based in the Central Expertise Policy and Support Division
of the Policy Group Directorate in London . Their stated
intention is to: "influence the degree to which risk management
techniques are taught in schools and other educational
establishments....." They are developing four projects of which
two are of interest insofar as the curriculum is concerned.
*They seek to raise the level f risk teaching in schools. *They
seek to provide risk teaching materials for teachers and
lecturers.
We can see that HSE has had a part to play in all the
initiatives regarding the curriculum and has also addressed
areas of concern, targeting primary school children in three
sectors where deaths have occurred.
Thus Farming, Railways and Construction Sites all have had
curriculum materials produced highlighting risks and unsafe
behaviour and aiming to educate and modify behaviours.
These are looked at later in this section.
HSE Resources for the Primary School
The resources provided for a Safety initiative within the
curriculum by HSE are very well produced and should be easily
integrated into any Primary School syllabus. Stay Safe On the
Farm, Stay Safe Railway Safety, and Stay Safe Building Site
Safety all contain, games, cartoons and puzzles to encourage
children to think about the hazards which exist in all these
industries, and how to avoid them. These industries often act as
a magnet to children who don't understand the dangers they
present and treat them like playgrounds. This is also why
special consideration needs to be given to ongoing construction
or maintenance works taking place on school sites. Stay Safe
booklets have been distributed at schools across the country,
and can be ordered free of charge from HSE Books on but access
to pdf versions are given below. *Stay Safe on the Farm -
Leaflet with puzzles and colouring exercise suitable for Years
4-6 www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/staysafe.pdf *Stay Safe Railway Safety
- Stay Safe Railways a website for Children to Learn about being
safe and keeping safe around Railways This is a Multimedia
Game/Scenario type program with a safety theme suitable for
Years 4-6 www.hse.gov.uk/education/railway/index.html *Stay Safe
Building Site Safety - This has a series of comic strips/Posters
and colouring exercises with game type questions and completion
exercises - suitable Years 4-6 www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/misc447.pdf
*You will find other items which may be integrated in Resources
in the Headteaher's Safety In addition HSE has also produced
videos aimed at parents, teachers and older children to raise
awareness. A four minute video Open Farms Healthy Children, is
available on HSE's web FREE site
www.hse.gov.uk/campaigns/killfields/ecoli.htm which ensures
parents, teachers and others are aware of the hidden risks of
picking up E-coli from animals.
The video Safe! - Helping children to stay safe on farms, which
has been distributed to all Local Authority education
departments, also shows children the hazards that exist on
farms. Copies of 'Safe! - Helping children to stay safe on
farms' price Ł20.00 + VAT, are also available for purchase from
HSE Books, Other Resources - Emergency Services.
Whilst HSE and DfES and others all have a central part to play.
It is the Emergency Services who deal with Risk, Risk
Assessment, Risk Control and Risk Management locally and day to
day and hour by hour.
They are also more available to a school to a school as a local
resource.
The Police have long visited schools delivering talks and
demonstrations for Drugs, Personal Safety and Road Safety for
pupils of Primary age.as have the Fire Service who are always
willing to co-operate with visits and Fire Safety presentations.
Ambulance NHS Trusts, Red Cross and St.John's are also resources
along with private Emergency Ambulance firms who are often under
used by schools.
If the Emergency Service presenters are sufficiently well
briefed and the pupils are appropriately prepared a community
approach can be taken to risk by using such resources.
An excellent example of this has just been released.
The RNLI have a Youth Section at
http://www.rnli.org.uk/young.asp which gives access to a wide
range of resources including
All Aboard - KS 2 Resource with poster and teacher's notes plus
activities and a KSŁ resource which may be of use since it
covers beach visits etc called Get on Board.
The Coastguard (Maritime Coastguard Agency -MCA) and the Royal
National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) have teamed up to make
young people aware of the dangers near water.
They have produced an interactive CDROM entitled MAYDAY for KS2
pupils. This is an extensive resource with the CDROM as well as
information, activity cards and teacher's notes with ideas for
follow up projects. MAYDAY is structured so that it can either
be used with groups or by individuals and has a wide range of
activities which ends in a "Round Britain Yacht Race."
As well as helping in selling the "risk" message and thus
linking directly to the Health and Safety Curriculum the pack is
linked to KS2 in Humanities, Environmental Studies, Literacy and
Numeracy, ICT, Citizenship and PHSE.
This is a FREE resource and is divided into five sections:
1.Staying Safe - an ideal piece of pre visit instruction which
helps the children to recognise risks when they are near the
sea. This part of the resource also introduces the Beaufort
Scale, Shipping Weather Forecasts and the idea of maritime
charts and maps. 2.Rescue! Uses Scenarios to encourage children
to use their judgement to make risk based decisions to help
other people. 3.Crew - This introduces the children to the
people who risk their lives to help others on the sea and looks
at how they are trained and what motivates them. 4.Safer by
Design - Children find out about PPE and the wider range of
safety equipment used as control measures when a calculated risk
is taken by those who face the "angry sea" to help save lives.
This section also has some interesting Numeracy work based on
speeds of helicopters and boats in rescue situations. 5.Round
Britain Race - In this section children plan and take part in a
race, choosing equipment, planning routes as well as choosing
their team. This section supports KS2 Humanities and PHSE as
well as H&S.
Further information from Liza Linscott (RNLI) 01202663217 or
Julia Gosling (MCA) 020380329401 Other Resources The following
organisations have produced information and which may be of
interest and which can also be mostly accessed form the HSE
website. 1.HSE has produced resources which may be integrated
directly within the curriculum e.g statistics and all of their
resources for use in the classroom may be found at their
education site at: http://www.hse.gov.uk/education/resources.htm
these include the HSE produced resources above and access to the
following.
2.ROSPA have produced a FREE set of Information sheets with
notes and activities for Key Stages 1-4 on "Dangerous Substances
Everywhere" and a wide range of other resources at
http://www.rospa.com/education/pdfs/dangerous_substances.pdf
3.A CDROM produced by HSE for Middle and Secondary Schools
identified as for use with 11 -14 Year olds might be of interest
for more able Year 6s it is entitled "Human Torch" and is a "X
Files" type investigation into factors surrounding a (hopefully)
hypothetical case. More information may be found at
http://www.hse.gov.uk/education/humantorch.htm Curriculum and
Lesson Planning
Other ways of involving children in the safety process and them
being involved revolve around the actual process itself.
*Learning to identify Dangers(Hazards) and Risks(Likelihood of
the Danger leading an accident) *Learning to do Risk
Assessments. *Reviewing existing Risk Assessments. *Writing
Accident Reports. *First Aid *Learning to reduce and control
risks - e.g Swimming *School Council Representation on the
School Safety Committee. *Inspections for monitoring and Audit
*Setting School Safety Targets. *How much does an accident
really cost? Could be adopted to form the basis of some numeracy
see.HSE Booklet in Resource The integrated approach suggested by
the QCA in its Guidance may suggest ways in which some of the
above topics be introduced via the lesson planning process.
Pupils will need to learn the terms Risk, Hazard, Control
measure as soon as possible and have a secure foundation as
regards their definitions. This means that lesson plans need to
reflect this and integrate safety within planning other lessons,
which should be seen as opportunities. Almost any lesson or
behaviour in class can be taken for identifying and highlighting
dangers or hazards discussing what could happen in different
circumstances and how likely these risks are to lead to an
accident and what control measures need to be taken to reduce
this risk.
There is no doubt that integration of safety within the
curriculum is a valid approach and such the view of the value
such an approach shared by HSE, the Government and the "great
and the good".
DfES have produced a Safety Education guidance for teachers
which outlines good practice, this may be found and downloaded
from:
http://www.teachernet.gov.uk/docbank/index.cfm?id=1314
Best advice is that the school needs to adopt a "whole school
approach" to Health and Safety in the curriculum and it will be
clearly seen that this approach is what the National CUrriculum
already dictates.
About the author:
Dr. Paddy Swan is a qualified teacher with senior management
experience in UK schools and colleges. He also has almost 25
years safety experience in industry. He has developed over 100
online and multimedia safe systems training solutions. Paddy is
the author of School Basic Safety for Classroom and Support
staff for UK schools and the Headteacher's Safety Management
Toolkit at http://www.swaneducation.co.uk
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