Parents tend to go too far or not far enough in teaching kids how to protect themselves. Here are ten stranger danger tips for keeping your child safe from stranger abduction or attack. By Elece Hollis |
When your child was growing up, you taught her the danger of talking to strangers. Now that she's a teen, you need to deliver positive messages instead of scaring her. By LuAnn Schindler |
Does your child come home from school to an empty house? If you responded "yes," teaching a lesson on stranger safety to your child should be a top priority. By LuAnn Schindler |
Teaching stranger danger activities to preschoolers is important. To help your child understand the hows and whys of stranger safety, parents first need to start with basic information. Then, act our potential situations so your child recognizes possible threats. By LuAnn Schindler |
Find out about the shortcomings in stranger danger programs and what you can do to help keep your child safe. By Derek Gerry |
Stranger anxiety can be tough on parents and on relatives and friends who feel rejected by a baby. Use these strategies to make your baby feel comfortable. By Jenney Cheever |
One of the most important stranger safety facts for parents to know is that assaults and abductions by strangers are rarer than those committed by adults that children know. By Jenney Cheever |