- Describe what matters most when transporting children and youth while they are on field trips.
- Identify management practices that ensure staff keep children and youth safe when being transported and while they are on field trips.
- Apply the content of this lesson to ensure children and youth are transported safely.
Learn
Know
Transporting Children and Youth
Safety risk is elevated when children and youth are being transported. According to the Center for Injury Research and Prevention, motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among children. You can mitigate the risk by ensuring that vehicles are safe, drivers meet all requirements, and safety procedures are followed.
As the Program Manager, it is your responsibility to ensure that vehicles used to transport children comply with your program’s Service's vehicle requirements. It is also imperative that vehicle drivers are properly licensed and meet all requirements of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management. If necessary, two staff members may transport one child in a government vehicle.
When it comes to transportation, you are accountable for ensuring that children and youth are never transported in an unsafe vehicle, by unsafe individuals, or in staff vehicles. Systems for tracking vehicles and drivers must be followed at all times and concerns addressed immediately. In addition, you need to have staff and children routinely practice safe transportation drills.
Field Trips
Field trips provide extended learning experiences for children and youth and can be excellent for enriching the curriculum. Careful planning and preparation are important to keeping everyone safe while they have a good time.
If the field trip involves swimming, extra caution should be taken. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, drowning remains the second-leading unintentional injury-related death for children ages 1 to 14 years.
Supervise & ³Ô¹ÏÍø
Management Practices that ³Ô¹ÏÍø Transportation and Field Trips
The chart below summarizes your key responsibilities when it comes to ensuring children and youth are safe while being transported and on field trips.
The Importance of Sound Judgment
Sound judgment is a blend of common sense, business intelligence, and an understanding of people. As a Program Manager, you are expected to exercise good judgment in every decision you make.
To make good decisions based on sound judgment you must know your program’s Service's protocols and policies inside and out, use data gathered from checklists and assessments to immediately address safety concerns, and take the perspective of your staff members into account. Sound judgment is absolutely critical to keeping everyone in your program safe from harm.
Watch this video as a reminder why transportation procedures matter so much.
Explore
Take time during a staff meeting or work with the Training & Curriculum Specialist to ask staff members to identify possible emergency situations that could occur on field trips. Assign groups of staff members to research and write up solutions for each situation identified. Once you have reviewed their responses, use the template below to create a document to be included in a field-trip binder that would accompany staff on every field trip. Be sure each answer is aligned to your PUBLICprogram's policies and procedures.
Apply
Teaching children bus safety is a necessary step in preparing them to attend field trips. Work with staff members and use the Safe Behavior resource below to talk with the children and youth in your program about field trip and bus safety. Some topics to address include:
- Safe behavior while riding the bus
- Seatbelt safety
- Safe boarding/exiting practices
- Vehicle evacuation procedures
Using crosswalks Share the Head Count Checklist with staff as one tool that can be used to ensure that they are completing name to face checks and are accountable for all children during field trips. You can find additional information and resources on transportation safety at .
Demonstrate
Head Start. (n.d.). Encouraging Safe Behavior on Buses.
Head Start. (n.d.). Vehicle Evacuation Drills.
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. (n.d.). Parents Central, From Car Seats for Car Keys: Keeping Kids Safe homepage.
U.S Department of Transportation: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. (n.d.). Child Pedestrian Safety Curriculum Teachers Guide. Washington D.C.