Home Fire Safety

This page is from The Website for Young Marines
Learning Objectives:

  1. Identify fire hazards in the home.
  2. Learn the importance of correcting home fire safety hazards.

Materials: Drawings of three different rooms in a home: a kitchen, living room, and bedroom

Background:

Classroom Activity

1. Ask students if they know what fire hazards are and if they can name things in the home that might be considered a fire hazard.

Explain that these are dangerous things that could be in anyone's home.

2. Ask students if they know why it is important to identify and correct fire hazards in the home.

Students will probably conclude it is important in order to prevent a fire in the home and to prevent their families from being hurt in a fire. Stress that some hazards may not seem dangerous, such as overloaded extension cords, but that they could cause a fire when they least expect it. Fire hazards are especially dangerous at night, when no one is awake to notice that a fire has started.

3. Review the three rooms in the drawings. Identify the fire hazards that are found in these rooms. At a minimum, the students should identify:

4. OPTIONAL: Instruct students to draw a home floor plan and inspect their own homes with their parents.

Have students identify the fire hazards they found in each room. Students should also be able to explain what their parents did to correct the fire hazard. It is important that the students not touch electrical cords or electrical equipment, for example, themselves - a parent or another adult should make the necessary changes.

Home Fire Safety Drill for Parents

Accompany your child from room to room in your home, looking for possible safety hazards. When the child identifies one, talk about why it could be a hazard, and what can be done to correct it. Emphasize with your child that if they see fire hazards, they should tell you - children should not try to correct them themselves. Electricity and fire can be dangerous things, and children should ask adults to manipulate electrical cords, electrical equipment, etc.

more information can be found at the U.S. Fire Administration


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