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Maryland Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Education Program. Rockville, MD April 11, 2003. Maryland Highway Safety Office City of Rockville Toole Design Group, LLC. Why does Maryland need a Safety Education Program?. Why does Maryland need a Safety Education Program?.
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Maryland Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Education Program Rockville, MDApril 11, 2003 Maryland Highway Safety OfficeCity of RockvilleToole Design Group, LLC
Why does Maryland need a Safety Education Program? • MD experienced 3110 pedestrian and 1067 bicycle crashes in 2000. • MD averages 110 pedestrian fatalities per year—Pedestrians make up 16% of all traffic fatalities • Over 25% of pedestrian crashes in MD involve children aged 5-15 (this group makes up 15% of the population) • Over 45% of bicycle crashes in the US involve children under 15 (this group makes up 22% of the population) • Children are judged responsible for more than half of these crashes • Universal bike helmet use by ages 4-15 would prevent 57,000 to 100,000 head and face injuries each year
Safety Education Program Overview • Pedestrian Lessons (Kindergarten-2nd Grade) • Bicycle Lessons (3rd Grade-5th Grade) • 4 Core Lessons for Pedestrian and Bicycle • Enrichment Lessons • Hands-On Approach • Learn skills and behaviors, but kids still have fun • Flexible for teachers Sounds simple…
How was the Program Developed? • Review of the best ped and bike safety curricula from North America • Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Education Committee • Program Coordinator • Administrator • Teacher • Lesson writers • Outreach to Rockville community, teachers, and administrators—Builtsupport • Pilot Testing
Program Materials • Administrator’s Guide • Teacher’s Guide • Lesson Handbook
Administrator’s Guide • Benefits of ped and bike safety education (overheads for presentations) • Short summary of program • Maryland Learner Outcomes • Administrative issues • Instructor training • Equipment and materials • Liability • Community support
Teacher’s Guide • Lesson Summary • Time, objectives, and activities • Background Information • Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Concepts • Materials • Documenting Effectiveness • Letters to Parents, Program Flier, Certificate of Achievement
What are the Lessons All About? • Pedestrian Lesson Contents • Stopping at the edge before crossing the street • Looking left-right-left before crossing the street • Scanning left and right to look for traffic while crossing the street • Walking safely near the school bus • Choosing safe crossing locations; visual barriers • Looking left-right-left and behind when crossing intersections • Bicycle Lesson Contents • Wearing a bicycle helmet • Checking to make sure that the equipment is safe for riding • Rules of the road • Skills: balance, stopping, turning, and signaling
Lesson Layout • Lesson Outline • Time, Objectives, MLOs, Materials, Teaching Venue, Vocabulary, Statistics • Lesson Walk-Through • Introduction • Instruction • Activities • Handouts and Materials
Role of the Program Coordinator • Coordinate the program in a city or county area • Train teachers and then play advisory role • Find volunteers to assist • Promote program in local community • Manage equipment
Pilot to Statewide • Rockville Pilot • Written Materials (Jan. 2002-Aug. 2003) • 7 Rockville schools (Sep. 2002-Jun. 2003) • All Rockville schools (Sep. 2003-Jun. 2004) • Expand to two or three counties • Montgomery, Prince Georges, Baltimore City, others (Sep. 2003-2005) • Expand Statewide • Share positive results from Rockville and Montgomery County • Build support (Other communities Statewide) • Expand to more interested jurisdictions (Sep. 2004 and beyond)