Teaching Survival Skills to Children

When crisis strikes, knowing as many survival skills as possible may mean the difference between life and death for your children. We’re not saying that they should teeth on AKs but we do believe that survival should be as natural to them as brushing their teeth. You don’t have to be aggressive or scary about it, but you should teach your kids how to take care of themselves as they grow.

There are a few basic skills and games that you can play to help make learning survival skills easy and fun for your kids.

Situational Awareness

Being aware of your surroundings can quite literally save your life and today’s kids are more interested in the handheld video game or cell phone that never leaves their person. That means that they can barely get home from school, let alone tell you who or what they pass on the way.

Fortunately, you can make it fun while you sharpen their skills.

The license plate game: Pick out as many out-of-state tags as possible. The most wins. This teaches kids to pay attention to details. You can modify it by picking out the most Fords or Chevys or black SUVs. Mix it up however you’d like but make looking for details the name of the game.

I Spy:Another good detail game. Pick out something while you’re driving or at the store, park, etc. Describe it and ask them to figure out what you’re talking about.

The Description Game: Have your kids look at an area, a person, a vehicle or an object then close their eyes and tell you everything that they can remember. Whoever remembers the most details wins. If you only have one child, have them give you a set number of details for a small prize or reward.

The Right Way to… Game: This game teaches your kids how to get home or to another destination. Have them pick out landmarks that identify the route. Also, have them give you directions to wherever it is that you’re going. Make it fun and offer a reward for getting it right. Do the same thing when you’re camping or hiking by picking out identifying landmarks such as trees or rocks.

Evacuation Plans and Meet-Up Directions

You never know when something is going to happen and you will be separated from your kids. Maybe one of you won’t be home, or perhaps you just need to exit your house from different directions.

Regardless, have and practice an evacuation plan. Have designated meet-up points and have backup plans as well. For example, “meet here if we’re all in the house. If something happens and I don’t get there, go to …” Be explicit.

Teach your kids the S.T.O.P. acronym: Stop, Think, Observe, Plan. This will help keep them level-headed if they’re ever lost or separated from you.

  • Stop the minute that they realize that they’re lost.
  • Think about what’s happened. It’s easy for a kid to panic but if they know that they’re going to be scared, they may be more ready for it. They need to stop and think about the situation, which will help with the next step.
  • Observe. Where are they? What’s around them? What’s in their pockets or backpack that they can use to help themselves? Finally,
  • Plan. Figure out what to do. Should they blow their whistle or hide? Are they close to your meet-up point? Is it safe for them to move? They need to build a solid plan based upon what you’ve taught them. SO TEACH THEM.

Don’t be Afraid of the Dark

Fear of the dark can be paralyzing, especially if the situation is already stressful. Play games outside after dark if your kids are older. Make sure that the houselights are bright enough so that everybody can make it back.

If your kids are younger, play with them in the yard as it gets dark. Watch the stars and find the constellations. You can do this inside, too. Pretend the power goes out and operate inside with no lights for an evening.

This is a great way to practice other skills, too. While the electric is “out” practice not opening the fridge, as well as opening cans without electric, cooking outside and any other skill that you’ll need if the power goes down. Learn to play games too, since the TV is out of commission. It’s good practice.

Water Purification

Water is vital to survival but it can also be lethal. Teaching your kids how to tell the difference between water that’s safe and water that isn’t is a fundamental skill.

When you camp or picnic (even in the back yard or at the park) practice water purification techniques including boiling, filtering and using tabs so that your kids know what to do. Include water purification tabs in your kids’ backpacks, too.

Backyard Campouts

Just because the house is 100 feet away doesn’t mean that you have to use it. It’s a great way to camp with smaller kids while keeping the amenities close in case of emergency. Don’t use the house for any other reason, though.

Practice safely building fires (as long as it doesn’t get you kicked out of your HOA), cooking outside, and living without electric in general. Have your kids do as much as possible so that they learn how to do things for themselves.

Hide and Seek

small kidsThis teaches your kids to look for safe spots to hide or seek shelter. Pretty self-explanatory. Talk about the difference between hiding to stay safe from strangers who mean them harm, and coming out of hiding if they’re lost when search parties come near.

Scavenger Hunts

This is a great way for kids to learn about the usable items in their environment. Use it as an opportunity to teach them about edible berries, different types of trees or plants, or even let them find ten items that they feel would be most useful in a survival situation, and have them explain why. Have fun!

Growing Vegetables

Kids love to play in the dirt and be helpful. Even if you’re only growing a few herbs in a window box, teach your kids how to do it as they grow.

It’s a useful skill to have even if nothing ever happens. It could save their lives if SHTF.

Being Healthy

Thirty percent of Americans are clinically obese and unfortunately many of those are children. During disaster, it’s going to be much more difficult for your children to escape if they can’t even walk out of the yard without huffing and puffing.

Exercise with your kids, encourage active play and teach them the difference between healthy foods, treats, and foods that should never be eaten because they are downright bad for you. A healthy child will stand a much better chance of surviving a disaster, and so will you. Take good care of your body and teach your kids to do the same: it’s your most important survival tool.

How to Barter and Bargain

If you’re like most of us, you enjoy finding a good deal. Therefore, you probably see your share of yard sales or flea markets. If so, take your kids with you and teach them to bargain and barter, too. Teach them to be fair; make deals that benefit both parties while still saving you money.

Nobody wants to think about being separated from their children in an emergency but it’s a very real possibility. Even if it’s only for a few minutes or a few hours, if your kids know how to react, it can make the difference between safety and tragedy.

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This article has been written bu Theresa Crouse for Survivopedia.

Written by

Theresa Crouse is a full-time writer currently living in central Florida. She was born and raised in the hills of West Virginia, where she learned to farm, hunt, fish, and live off the land from an early age. She prefers to live off the grid as much as possible and does her best to follow the “leave nothing behind but footprints” philosophy. For fun, she enjoys shooting, kayaking, tinkering on her car and motorcycle, and just about anything else that involves water, going fast, or the outdoors.

Latest comments
  • being a Grandfather…it’s also helpful to teach your grandchildren everything that is in the article… Didn’t you teach your children and aren’t you happy to pass on some Grampy things too?

  • Thank you so much for your helpful ideas, this is really wonderful. I hope people are passing this on
    We need a whole book of such games to carry with us & unfold total magic.A blog would be a great
    thing too, where we can share our creative ideas of such fun games.This could be the start of the
    revolution we were waiting for all along, starting with our kids, absolutely ingenius.

  • Great article and I agree with all, but you missed one. Teach FIGHT, FLIGHT or FREE. Predators know the fight or flight, but by observation, those in the know also can speak to when to freeze in place until safe to get away. PREY know this one. Like it or not, children will be prey for someone in a grid down situation. Most people don’t want to think this way but if our children are to live and thrive, they need to know this too.
    Go to the parks, malls and large stores, sit with your children and discuss what they see in the people walking by. Help them to learn what to watch for, they have great survival instincts which just need to be sharpened. Make sure they are sharpened not squashed.

  • My four-year-old guided someone from my house to a location and back home because she heard me talk to her older brother and sister. Since I had told her to go to an employee in a store or the customer service desk if she got lost, she did one day. The trouble was, she got an ice cream cone. Then, she disappeared within two minutes of entering that store. Then, I had to threaten her if she did it again, trying to balance her true need with a stunt for an ice cream cone! She turned out to be the most resilient and fearless child even though she had an older brother in addition to an older sister.

    She had heard so many instructions from the time she was a baby, listening to me caution and teach the older two. One day, when she was five, she walked home from school for the first time, crossing a major highway.

    My three children were given the responsibility to go into the dry cleaners, order at the counter at fast food, put things in the layaway by themselves. I was never standing behind them or nearby, but I could see them and they knew they could see me and were not alone, but they were on their own.

    I was always amazed at what they could handle that was a new situation because they built on old experiences. Their critical thinking skills were more developed than children their own age. Other mothers were surprised at what my children did and were allowed to do.

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