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Body Safety Resources
for Children and Educators

Body Safety Programs to empower children, educators and families

In the tender years of childhood, cultivating an understanding of body safety is paramount. Just as we teach children to look both ways before crossing the street, it’s crucial to equip them with the knowledge of their bodily autonomy. Body safety education empowers children, helping them recognize and communicate about inappropriate behaviors or touch. By fostering this awareness, we’re not only protecting them from potential harm but also setting a foundation for healthy relationships and self-respect as they grow. It’s an essential life lesson that goes hand in hand with their overall well-being.

What is Body Safety Education about?

Designed to empower children to understand the 5 Body Safety Rules to help protect them from harm and abuse.

Developed by educator and author, Jayneen Sanders (AKA Jay Dale), this essential program for educators and parents will help you learn how to use the resources and, most importantly, how to teach and empower children with these important and practical safety practices.

Many people are uninformed as to what constitutes a body safety education program and fear that such a program would discuss sex and sexual abuse with their children. This is not the case. Where young children are concerned, body safety programs should be age-appropriate, non-threatening, and aim to teach children these basic points:

  • Your body is YOUR body and no-one else has the right to touch it, especially your private areas (those covered by a bathing suit)
  • If someone does touch you inappropriately, you must tell a trusted adult and keep telling until you are believed
  • Be able to identify the difference between safe and unsafe touch
  • Understand what the words ‘respect’ and ‘consent’ mean
  • Know what actions you can take if you feel worried or unsafe

What’s our philosophy to Body Safety Education and Training?

We don’t train children we train the educators of children. There is a really good reason for this.

Part of the Body Safety lesson plans talks about the importance of building a trusted safety network. These are 5 people that the children can trust to talk about anything to especially if they feel unsafe or scared. These are commonly family members, teachers, chaplains, support workers, and friends.

We feel that it is critically important that the educators who spend the most time with the children are the ones to talk about Body Safety and Consent with them. We feel this gives the best opportunity for support and ongoing learning.

What’s included in Educator Training?

In this essential 120-minute educator training for up to 50 teachers, you will learn how to use the resources and, most importantly, how to teach and empower children to understand the ‘5 body safety rules’ to protect children from harm and abuse.

These 10 lesson plans and the included resources can be easily embedded in the school, kinder, childcare curriculums, Sunday school curriculum, or another educational teaching curriculum.

Share this program with your child educatorEnquire about Training

Body Safety Education sessions for Parents

90 min webinar session for parents.

Designed to empower parents whos children are learning the 5 Body Safety Rules to help protect them from harm and abuse.

We believe in a ‘whole of community approach’ which means we also run Parenting Workshops to inform parents of what children will be learning, the need for Body Safety Education in the organisation and how they can support their children at home, so the learning continues. The Parent Workshop is usually run in conjunction with the booking of an Educators Training.

See more about these webinars

When to Begin Consent and Body Safety Conversations

We regularly get asked by parents and carers. “When should I start teaching my child about consent and body safety?” It’s an excellent question.

Below is an approximate guide on when to begin conversations with your child about consent and Body Safety. 

All children are different, and you know your child best, so also be guided by their ability to focus and the questions they ask. These conversations are ongoing and can happen over years. Use their questions, family discussions, children’s books, and situations that may occur to have open and ongoing conversations. Everyday situations that may arise, can be teaching and learning opportunities.

Birth to 2 years

  • Use the correct terms for your child’s private parts from Day 1.
  • Tell your child what you are doing to their body and why e.g. ‘I’m just putting your socks on so your feet will be warm.’
  • Validate their feelings, e.g. ‘I can see you are sad, but I need to go shopping. I’ll be back very soon. Gran will take good care of you.’
  • Note your child’s body language, e.g. if you are playing a tickling game and you can see from their body language they don’t like it, stop immediately.
  • Ensure health professionals talk to your child about what they are doing to their body and always ask for consent before entering your child’s body boundary.

2 years to 3 years (verbal)

  • Introduce the term ‘body boundary’ — the invisible space around our bodies. Explain that everyone needs to ask for consent before entering another person’s body boundary.
  • Let your child know they can say, ‘No’ to kisses and hugs if they want to. How they greet another person is always their choice.
  • Let your child know they can say, ‘No’ to tickling games and inform adults (or older children) when your child says, ’Stop!’ they need to stop immediately.
  • Ensure health professionals ask for your child’s consent.
  • Let your child have choice and agency wherever possible, and if it is safe to do so.

3 years to 6 years+

  • Continue to reinforce the concepts of body boundaries and consent.
  • Formally (and over a number of sessions) teach your child about: feeling safe and feeling unsafe; Early Warning Signs; a Safety Network; the difference between secrets and surprises; the difference between safe and unsafe touch; private parts are private and what to do if they are touched inappropriately, see inappropriate images or someone asks them to touch their private parts.
Download the guide

Free Body Safety information and

resources for parents and educators

Poster – My Body Safety Rules

5 core body safety rules for Children.

Poster – My Early Warning Signs

Helping children to understand that “funny feelings” they may feel, may their body telling them they feel unsafe.

Poster – We are a child safe organisation

Poster – My Body Safety Rules – Non English

My Body Safety Rules is also available in non-English versions: Afrikaans, Arabic, Bulgarian, Danish, French, German, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Malagasy, Malaysian, Mongolian, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish, Vietnamese, Xhosa, Myanmar, Poe Kayin, Sagaw Kayin.

See non-English versions here

Posters – My early warning signs – Non english

My Early Warning Signs is also available in non-English versions: Afrikaans, Arabic, Indonesian, Malaysian, Nepali, Spanish, Swedish, Xhosa.

See non-English versions here

My Safety Network – Activity Sheet

We at ChildSafe have partnered with Valuing Children Initiative (VCI) to develop a resource that empowers children to discover how to choose their safety network.

Your safety network is a group of people, chosen by you, who make you feel safe, provide you with support, assistance, and, if necessary, protection. They are people who you trust and feel you can go to when you feel unsafe. It is important to know that just because someone is an adult or tells you to trust them, you don’t have to. It is your right to choose your safety network.

Download PDF

Poster – How are you feeling today? 

Assist young children to speak about feelings with this great activity.

Download PDF

Poster Feelings Cards – Body Safety

Help children to identify and express their feelings with these “feeling cards”.

Download PDF

7 Key Body Safety Messages

A great resource for parents, caregivers, and other adults to remember the 7 key body safety messages for kids.

Book – My Body! What I say goes!

A book to empower and teach children about personal body safety, feelings, safe and unsafe touch, private parts, secrets and surprises, consent, and respectful relationships.

Written by the author of ‘No Means No!’ and ‘Some Secrets Should Never Be Kept’, this book will teach children the following crucial and empowering skills in personal body safety:

  • Identifying safe and unsafe feelings
  • Recognising early warning signs
  • Developing a safety network
  • Using the correct names for private parts
  • Understanding the difference between safe and unsafe touch
  • Understanding the difference between secrets and surprises
  • Respecting body boundaries
Purchase the book

Book – No means No.

No Means No! is a 26 page, full colour children’s picture book about an empowered little girl who has a very strong and clear voice in all issues, especially those relating to her body and personal boundaries.

This book can be read to children from 3 to 9 years. It is a springboard for discussions regarding children’s choices and their rights. The ‘Note to the Reader’ at the beginning of the book and the ‘Discussion Questions’ on the final pages, guide and enhance this essential discussion.

It is crucial that our children, from a very young age, are taught to have a clear, strong voice in regards to their rights – especially about their bodies. In this way, they will have the confidence to speak up when they are unhappy or feel uncomfortable in any situation. A strong, confident voice as a young child converts to a strong, confident pre-teen, teenager and adult.

Purchase the book

Book – Indigenous Version – My body, What I say Goes.

Kiah’s Edition is the Indigenous version of the best selling title My Body! What I Say Goes!. This book will help children to protect their bodies from inappropriate touch through age-appropriate body safety skills. Illustrated by awarding-winning Indigenous artist Jasmine Seymour and piloted with First Nations students, children will be empowered to say in a strong and clear voice, “This is my body! What I say goes!” Through culturally-appropriate illustrations and engaging text, this book (written by the author of Let’s Talk About Body Boundaries, Consent & RespectNo Means No! and Some Secrets Should Never Be Kept) will teach children the following crucial and empowering skills in personal body safety:

  • identifying safe and unsafe feelings
  • recognizing early warning signs
  • developing a safety network
  • using the correct names for private parts
  • understanding the difference safe and unsafe touch
  • understanding the difference between secrets and surprises
  • respecting body boundaries.
Purchase the book

Past webinar recordings

View past webinar recordings for free on the ChildSafe YouTube page.

Facebook page for parents

ChildSafe Australia established this group to help support parents and build a community where we can all learn and support each other.

eSafety online

View resources and guides to help build your family’s eSafety online.

Reporting abuse

View resources and referral agencies to assist you in reporting abuse and receiving help.
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