Institute for Childhood Preparedness

Situational Awareness

A practical guide for early childhood professionals, families, and everyday life
"Attention buys you options."
Why This Matters

Paying Attention Is a Life Skill

Situational awareness is not about being paranoid. It is about being curious about your environment, knowing what belongs and what does not, and giving yourself enough time to respond safely. The more you see ahead of time, the more options you have. This skill works everywhere: at your program, in parking lots, at the grocery store, on a walk with your family.

The goal is simple: see things early, avoid problems before they start, and keep yourself, your coworkers, and the children in your care as safe as possible.

J D L R

Just Doesn't Look Right

Your simplest and most powerful tool. If something feels off, it probably is. Trust your gut.

Core Principles

What Awareness Gives You

Early Identification

The sooner you notice something out of place, the more time you have to respond. A suspicious vehicle, an unfamiliar person lingering near your entrance, or unusual activity in your parking lot are all things that are easier to address when you catch them early.

Escape and Avoidance

If we can avoid a problem entirely, that is always the best outcome. Cross the street. Move the car. Turn around. Wait for another person to arrive. You do not need to confront a situation to stay safe.

Better Reporting

If you do witness something, your awareness makes you a better witness. You will be able to describe vehicles, people, and sequences of events more accurately for first responders. This makes a real difference.

Faster Response

Knowing where your exits are, knowing the streets you are on, and having a general sense of your environment allows you to act quickly and give accurate information to 911 if needed.

The Biggest Distraction

Put the Phone Down

The single most common factor in awareness failures is phone distraction. Texting, scrolling social media, and browsing with your head down eliminates your ability to see what is happening around you. Talking on the phone is different: you can still look around while on a call. The problem is screen fixation, not the device itself.

Headphones Too

Using headphones removes one of your most important senses. Hearing is how you notice approaching vehicles, people behind you, and sounds that signal danger. Keep at least one ear free when you are out in public.

High Awareness Zones

Parking Lots and Transitional Spaces

Parking lots are where a significant number of incidents begin. This is true at child care facilities during drop off and pick up, and it is equally true at shopping centers, train stations, and workplaces. These are transitional spaces where people are distracted, carrying things, buckling children into car seats, or moving between their vehicle and a building.

For Programs: Monitor Drop Off and Pick Up

If you have camera feeds for your parking lot, use them. A staff member watching the lot during arrival and dismissal times can spot problems before they reach your door. The Indiana child care worker who noticed a young man with a long gun in the parking lot saved lives because she was paying attention.

At Your Program

Workplace Awareness

Your daily environment is where your awareness advantage is greatest. You know what normal looks like at your site. You know who belongs and who does not. You know the rhythms of the day. Use that knowledge.

Cameras Buy You Time

Camera systems give you advance notice. A director in Dallas received a mobile alert about an intruder inside her building before she arrived and was able to call police before entering. That camera feed may have prevented a much worse outcome.

Beyond the Workplace

Awareness in Your Personal Life

Everything you are learning here applies outside of work too. Whether you are at a restaurant, a concert, a mall, or walking your dog in a new neighborhood, the same principles keep you and your family safe.

Every Time You Enter a New Space

  1. Identify the exit you came through
  2. Find at least one alternative exit
  3. Take a general scan of the room and the people in it
  4. Note anything that feels out of place
  5. Know what street you are on in case you need to call for help

This is not about living in fear. It takes just a few seconds and quickly becomes second nature. The goal is preparation, not paranoia.

For the Children

Teaching Situational Awareness to Kids

Children can absolutely learn awareness skills. The key is making it fun, age appropriate, and nonthreatening. These are observation games, not fear exercises. Children who develop these skills naturally become more attentive to their surroundings as they grow.

Kim's Game

Place random items on a tray. Let children look for 60 seconds, cover them up, then see how many they remember. Used by military professionals for decades. Works for all ages.

Place Awareness

"Where is the car?" "Where is the exit?" "What color was that building?" Simple spotting games that build observation habits during everyday outings.

Spot the Difference

Available at all difficulty levels from toddler through adult. Strengthens the ability to notice when something has changed or is out of place.

Sign Language for Safety

Teach children the sign for "help." It is discreet, nonthreatening, and can be used when a child cannot or is afraid to speak. Cameras and bystanders can recognize repetitive signing.

Key Takeaways

Remember These

JDLR
Trust your gut
2+
Know your exits
ICP Resources

Visit Us at icp.us

Ready to take the next step? Here is how the Institute for Childhood Preparedness can support your program.

Customized On Site Training

We come to your location, work in your actual classrooms, and build a plan specific to your facility. Nothing generic, nothing cookie cutter. Customized training developed specifically for early childhood professionals. Visit childhoodpreparedness.org

Site Assessments

A thorough walk through of your facility identifying vulnerabilities, access control gaps, lighting issues, and camera blind spots. You receive a written corrective action report with prioritized next steps. Visit childhoodpreparedness.org

ICP Walkie Talkies

Secure, encrypted, lightweight radios designed for early childhood environments. Five day battery, unlimited range, five ounces. Used on Marine Corps bases worldwide. Approximately $100 per radio. Order at walkietalkies.us

ICP Text Platform

One of the most affordable mass text platforms available, built for programs that need rapid, reliable family and staff communication. 99% open rate, 97% read within three minutes. Visit us at icp.us

Early Childhood Chats Podcast

A podcast for early childhood professionals covering practical conversations on safety, leadership, and program quality. Available at earlychildhoodchats.com and wherever you get your podcasts.

Head Start East

Our nonprofit organization designed to enhance professional development for early childhood programs. Don't miss our annual conference in 2027 in Puerto Rico. Visit headstarteast.org to learn more.

Ready to build a true culture of safety?

Visit us at icp.us to access free social stories, emergency checklists, podcasts, and to learn more about our training programs.