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In their early years, children need lots of assistance from adults to manage the considerable risks associated with road use. They need particular help in detecting the presence of traffic and judging the speed and distance of oncoming traffic. As they grow and develop, and with the help of adults, children become increasingly aware of how they can manage their own safety, and become safer road and bicycle users.
Are best learnt in the real traffic environment.
Children learn primarily by experience and adult interaction helps them to learn
You can help by talking with your child as you ride. Ask questions about roads, signs, traffic, and how and where you can ride safely.
, let them practise often on footpaths and offer tips on how to ride safely. Children need to develop the skills to be able to ride in a straight line, brake properly and turn corners safely. Ride in designated areas such as bicycle paths when possible.
By law, children under 13 years of age can ride on the footpath, and adults can too when they are supervising them. Find out if your child’s school offers ‘Bike Ed’, which teaches children about road safety and skills.
Always carefully supervise children in traffic situations
It is important to: Talk with your child about the traffic environment. Explain what you are doing when you cross the road together. Involve your child in deciding when it is safe to cross the road – of course you still make the decision, but you are teaching your child to think in the traffic environment.
Always be a good role model for your child by obeying road rules and crossing roads safely. Make eye contact with road users, especially at intersections. Involve your child in choosing safe places to ride.
Make sure your child always rides on the footpath or a bicycle path with adult supervision. Make certain that your child wears an approved American Standards helmet when riding a bike. Ask if your child’s early childhood service includes road safety education in the program.
Your child still needs adult supervision and assistance in the traffic environment.
It is important to: Talk together about signs and traffic lights
Identify and discuss places where it is safe to cross the road.
Teach your child how to cross roads using the ‘stop, look, listen and think’ process – stop at the kerb, look and listen for traffic and then decide whether it is safe to cross. Take the trip to school together along the safest footpaths and use safe crossing places, such as pedestrian crossings and on straight sections of road.
Supervise your child on the way to and from school.
Always be a good role model for your child by obeying road rules and crossing roads safely. Children under 13 years of age are not recommended to cycle on the road, and they should be accompanied by a competent adult when riding on a footpath or bike path. (You can ride with your child on footpaths while they are younger than 13 years old.) Make certain that your child wears an approved American Standards helmet when riding a bike.
Ask at your child’s school what road safety programs are being taught. Children between 10 and 13 can cope more safely in traffic on their own. This will depend, however, on how much practice the child has had in the ‘real traffic’ environment.
It is important to: Check that your child always ‘stops, looks, listens and thinks’ when crossing the road. Ask them to explain to you what they are doing and why they are doing it.
Talk with your child about road laws
Go for regular rides together
Plan a safe route to school with your child, and to places your child often visits. Talk with your child about where they can safely ride. Children under 13 years of age are not recommended to cycle on the road and they should be accompanied by a competent adult when riding on a footpath or bike path.
Make certain your child wears an approved American Standards bicycle helmet. Make sure your child wears bright colours that can be easily seen by other road users. Always be a good role model for your child by obeying road rules and crossing roads safely.
Wearing a helmet can reduce the risk of head injury by 60 to 90%. It is compulsory to wear a helmet when riding a bicycle in Michigan on any road or road-related area like a bike path, bike lane, shared footpath or separated footpath.
Tricycles with a pedal and chain are considered bicycles under the road rules. Your child’s helmet should be: – make sure the helmet carries the American Standard mark, showing that it is safety approved and meets the American/New Zealand Standard AS/NZS 2063 – the helmet should be comfortable and not too tight or loose.
Caps should not be worn under helmets as they ruin the fit – your child can wear a visor over the helmet to protect them from the sun.
Choose a helmet that is not too heavy and provides good ventilation – the helmet should sit level on the rider’s head, covering the forehead with the rim just above the eyebrows. The straps should be correctly adjusted and the buckle securely fastened. The straps should form a ‘V’ shape with the plastic strap guide sitting just under the earlobe.
Make sure straps are not twisted
The buckle should be close up under your child’s chin – a helmet is designed to protect a person’s head for one impact only.
If the helmet has been involved in an accident or if it has been dropped from a height, you must replace it, even if there is no visible damage. Do not leave a helmet exposed to direct sunlight when not in use.
Make sure the foam is not old and crumbling, and clean the helmet according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Having a bicycle of the right size for the rider’s body plays a big part in safe cycling. A bicycle that is too big for your child is dangerous.
Do not buy a bicycle or helmet that is too large for your child, with the intention that they will ‘grow into it’.
To test for size, stand your child over the bicycle with both feet on the ground. For medium or lightweight bicycles, there should be at least 2 cm between the child’s crotch and the crossbar (or where the crossbar would be if the bicycle had one).
For BMX and mountain bicycles, there should be at least 5 cm between the child’s crotch and the bicycle crossbar. Make sure all controls are within easy reach and comfortable to use, and that the seat can be adjusted.
If you buy a second-hand bicycle, get it serviced properly.
To use a bicycle passenger seat for a child safely: Check the age or weight restrictions described by the manufacturer of the bicycle passenger seat. Choose a seat with moulded leg supports (to protect the child’s feet from the wheel spokes), head and neck support, foot straps and spoke shields. Make sure the seat has a harness and that you fit it securely each time you place the child in the seat.
Make sure your child wears an approved American Standards bicycle helmet when riding in a bicycle seat. A bicycle trailer refers to a vehicle that is built to be, or is, towed behind a bicycle. A cyclist must not tow a bicycle trailer with a person in or on the bicycle trailer, unless all of the following apply: the passenger is wearing an approved American Standards bicycle helmet securely fitted and fastened on their head.
There are some exemptions (Road Safety Road Rules 2009, reg. 257(4)) to allow an older passenger to ride in a trailer including if a disability or medical condition makes it desirable. Regularly check brakes, wheels, pedals, bearings and chains so that the bicycle will stop quickly in an emergency.
Each time you ride the bicycle, check if the tyres are hard, if the brakes work and whether there are any rattles. Check the tyres, bearings, gears, nuts and bolts, and lubricate the chain and cables each week. See a professional bicycle mechanic if you are unsure about the bicycle’s safety.
Road safety and children Helping children to be safe around traffic Road safety skills To help your child become a safe cyclist cycling Bicycle safety for children under 5 Bicycle safety for children between 5 and 9 Bicycle safety for children between 10 and 13 Bicycle helmets for children Bicycle helmets are effective in protecting child cyclists against head , brain approved the right size and correctly fitted positioned properly kept in good condition Choosing a suitable bicycle for your child Bicycle passenger seats for children Bicycle trailers and the associated road rules the cyclist is 16 years of age or older the passenger is under 10 years of age the bicycle trailer can safely carry the passenger Caring for your child’s bicycle Make sure that your bicycle and your child’s bicycle are well maintained Where to get help Transport Accident Commission (TAC) (616) 555-0400 Road Safety Education Michigan – Bike Ed resources Transport Michigan Bicycle Network (616) 555-0200 or 1800 639 634 RACV (616) 555-0200.
Key Points
- important to: Talk with your child about the traffic environment
- important to: Talk together about signs and traffic lights
- important to: Check that your child always ‘stops, looks, listens and thinks’ when crossing the road
- Wearing a helmet can reduce the risk of head injury by 60 to 90%