- 64 traffic signs with instructions for road safety education
- re-enact common traffic situations on the blackboard
- find their way around in road traffic, move safely and recognise dangers
- suitable for road safety education, magnetic
- includes all road signs and zebra crossings, traffic lights
- also includes pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists, cars
- How do I behave appropriately? Choose the right answer from 2 options.
- both sides can be written on
- wipeable, made of plastic, reusable
TimeTEX Innovation
Demonstration video
- name safety-relevant parts and learn important road signs
- both sides can be written on
- wipeable, made of plastic, reusable
TimeTEX Innovation
Demonstration video
- How do I behave properly and safely in road traffic?
- both sides can be written on
- wipeable, made of plastic, reusable
TimeTEX Innovation
Demonstration video
- ideal for indoor and outdoor use
- increases understanding of correct behaviour on the roads
- creates room for movement and promotes observational skills
TimeTEX Innovation
- suitable for road safety education, magnetic
- includes all road signs and zebra crossings, traffic lights
- also includes pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists, cars
Traffic Education - Safe in Traffic
Since children initially lack the foresighted eye and proper overview in traffic, it poses an increased risk for them. Concentration, visual and auditory perception, as well as quick reaction skills, are important abilities for children to navigate safely in traffic. Children should be introduced to road safety as early as possible, making traffic education in elementary school from grade 1 and even in kindergarten indispensable.
Traffic Education in Kindergarten
Traffic education in elementary school builds on the experiences children have gained in kindergarten or at home. A significant focus of traffic education in kindergarten is mobility education. Here, the interplay of movement, perception, and communication is promoted in a playful manner. Important foundations are laid with mobility promotion, which the little ones will benefit from later on.
Traffic Education in Elementary School
How do you cross the street as a pedestrian? Why do you buckle up in the car? These and other important questions about traffic education are conveyed to students through everyday situations and vivid teaching materials in the science class. The focus of traffic education in grades 1 to 4 is on walking to school training and cycling education. The aim is to train students to be independent, safe, and traffic-conscious road users. As part of traffic education, you can also, for example, address the mutual influence between traffic and weather and thus transition to the topic of weather and seasons in science class.
Traffic Education in Grades 1 to 2
With the start of school, some first graders are now tackling their daily school route for the first time without their parents. Until then, they were always accompanied by adults. This poses a new challenge for many. Moreover, it presents a few potential dangerous situations, as the little ones can easily be overlooked by drivers, and elementary school students initially lack a sense of speed and distances. For this reason, the central topics of traffic education in grades 1 and 2 are the school route and participation in traffic as pedestrians and passengers in cars and public transportation. First aid is also an important focus in the curriculum. With the right teaching material for traffic education in elementary school, children can recognize traffic signs and complex traffic situations and behave more safely in traffic.
Grades 3 & 4 - Cycling Education
As part of cycling education, children in grade 3 learn about right-of-way rules, traffic signs, and proper behavior in traffic until practical training in traffic education usually takes place in grade 4. This way, children not only learn how to behave correctly as pedestrians or passengers in cars or buses in traffic, but also as cyclists.
In our range, you will find various teaching materials for traffic education, such as the comprehensive traffic set or the traffic sign box. With these, you can recreate traffic situations in a playful way. This prepares your children theoretically and practically for traffic on foot or by bicycle!