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Safety Education Column for Primary School Safety Production Month

Safety Education Column for the Safety Production Month in Primary Schools

June is the Safety Production Month in our country, so what kind of safety knowledge can be introduced in the Safety Production Month Safety Education Column in primary schools?

Fifteen pieces of common sense that children should memorize

1. Be wary of cars.

Parents should tell their children not to play in or around a parked car, and to use the left-hand door to open the door and get out of the car.

2. Keep sentries ready all year round.

Prepare a whistle for your child. If you blow the whistle in an emergency, you can turn danger into good luck.

3. Do not step on manhole covers.

Tell your children not to step on manhole covers and to go around them when they encounter them.

4. Threesomes are relatively safe.

Tell your children not to go to a classmate’s house alone. Threesomes are relatively safe. Don't be alone with others in the room for more than half an hour. Children should take the initiative to tell their parents information (name, gender, phone number, address).

5. Room for maneuver.

Tell your children not to put part of their body into a small space, such as inserting their fingers into the mouth of a bottle or putting their head into the gap between the iron railings of the courtyard wall to avoid getting stuck.

6. Children’s safety is the most important thing.

Life is priceless. Parents should educate their children that when encountering danger, preserving life is the most important thing, and no object can be compared with life.

7. Don’t turn your pen into a dagger.

In school, the most common object held by children is a pen. Parents and teachers should warn their children that pens can turn into daggers and accidentally injure their classmates or themselves.

8. Urine can help you escape from fire.

Teach children how to escape from a fire. For example, many people who died in a fire were killed by smoke. If there is no water source around you in a fire, you can pee on the clothes you took off, and then cover your mouth and nose with the clothes soaked by urine to escape.

9. Don’t cut your fingernails and toenails too short.

Cutting fingernails and toenails too short can become sharp knives that stab the child, leading to paronychia.

10. Don’t let others touch the area covered by your vest and pants.

As parents, we should repeatedly warn our children not to let others touch the areas covered by their vests and underpants, even teachers, relatives and other familiar people.

11. Do not eat cold drinks.

Please tell your children to eat less or no cold drinks.

12. Don’t hold back your urine.

Please tell your child not to hold back his urine. The kidney is an important organ in the human body. Holding back urine will increase the burden on the kidney and can also lead to pyelonephritis and cystitis.

13. Recharge your batteries.

Ensuring adequate sleep in childhood is to replenish energy for life.

14. Refuse to be exposed.

Exposure to the sun for a long time, especially at noon, can burn the skin and even induce skin cancer. Please tell your children to avoid prolonged exposure to the sun to ensure skin safety.

15. Remember important information.

Be sure to let your children remember their parents’ names, mobile phones, and home addresses. No matter what happens, they can find you with the help of others. Precautions for physical education classes

1. Long-distance running and other events must be carried out according to the prescribed track, and no cross-tracks are allowed. This is not only a requirement for competition, but also a guarantee of safety. Especially when you are sprinting towards the starting point, you must abide by the rules, because the momentum generated by the human body is very strong at this time, and the mind is concentrated on the competition. There is no alertness in the mind. Once each other stumbles, they may be seriously injured.

2. When doing long jump, you must strictly follow the teacher’s instructions for running and taking off. Before taking off, the front foot should hit the wooden take-off board, and after taking off, it should fall into the sand pit. This is not only a technical essential for long jump training, but also a necessary measure to maintain physical safety.

3. When conducting throwing training, such as throwing grenades, shot put, discus, javelin, etc., you must act according to the teacher's instructions and stop them without any carelessness. Some of these sports equipment are sturdy and heavy, and some have sharp metal heads at the front. If used without permission, they may hit others or themselves, causing injuries. Even life-threatening.

4. When training on horizontal bars, parallel bars and high jump, a mat with a thickness that meets the requirements must be prepared on the equipment. If you jump directly onto the solid ground, you will injure your leg joints and the back of your head. When doing single and parallel bar movements, various effective measures should be taken to avoid slipping when doing double-handed lifting of the bars, and to avoid falling off the bars and causing physical injuries.

5. When doing jump training such as vaulting and box jumping, there must be a springboard in front of the equipment and a protective mat behind the equipment. At the same time, teachers and classmates must stand beside the equipment for protection.

6. For mat exercises such as front and back rolls, push-ups, sit-ups, etc., you must be serious and careful when doing the movements, and do not play around to avoid sprains.

7. When participating in the training of basketball, football and other sports, you must learn to protect yourself, and do not hurt others by being reckless in the competition. In these fiercely contested sports, it is very important for safety to blindly abide by the rules of the competition. Safety knowledge to prevent stair stampedes

1. In the stairway, everyone should behave civilly when going up and down the stairs. When there are many people, there should be no crowding, no shouting, no slapstick, and no intentional shouting to create tension or panic. atmosphere.

2. Students going downstairs should try to avoid being in crowded crowds. If they have to, try to walk on the edge of the crowd.

3. When you notice a crowded crowd coming towards the direction you are walking, you should immediately move aside. Don’t panic, don’t run, and avoid falling.

4. Go with the flow of people and never go against it, otherwise you will be easily pushed down by the flow of people.

5. If you are caught in a crowded crowd, you must stand firm first. Do not tilt your body and lose your center of gravity. Use one hand to hold the other wrist tightly, spread your elbows, and place it flat on your chest. Bend forward slightly to create a certain space to ensure smooth breathing to avoid suffocation and fainting when crowded. Even if your shoes are stepped off, do not bend down to pick them up or tie them. If possible, grab something solid and reliable as soon as possible and walk slowly or stop, and then leave the scene quickly after the crowd has passed.

6. If you are unfortunately overwhelmed by a crowd, try to get close to the corner of the wall, curl your body into a ball, and clasp your hands behind your neck to protect the most vulnerable parts of your body.

7. When walking among people and encountering steps or stairs, try to grab the handrails to prevent falling.

8. In a crowded crowd, always stay vigilant. When you find that someone is in a bad mood or the crowd starts to commotion, you must be prepared to protect yourself and others.

9. When the crowd is in a panic, you should pay attention to your steps and be sure not to trip over yourself to avoid becoming a trigger of a stampede.

10. When you find someone in front of you has fallen suddenly, stop immediately, shout for help, and tell the people behind you not to move forward. ;