Sunday, July 6, 2008

Speaking of Kids


Children also use electricity and need to use it safely. You, as a parent (or an adult friend), need to instruct them about the hazards of yanking electrical cords out of receptacles instead of holding the plug and pulling, using a hair dryer near water or with wet hands even if you have a GFCI in the bathroom, and sticking pens into receptacles to watch them melt. In addition to your always welcome lecturing, a number of audiovisual helpers are available that could be shown at your children’s school.
Some of these films include …
  • I’m No Fool with Electricity, by Disney Educational Productions. This film, according to its catalog description, somewhat implausibly shows Pinocchio and Geppetto exploring electrical safety both indoors and outdoors. Because he was made from wood, Pinocchio has the built-in advantage of being an insulator instead of an electrical conductor, at least as long as he remains dry.
  • Electrical Safety from A to Zap, from Perennial Education, Inc. In this film, a mouse shows a cat how to use electricity safely, their lack of opposable thumbs notwithstanding.
  • Play It Safe from HECO. This video features two children who learn safe practices around electricity. The film’s big plus so far in our list of audiovisuals is the fact that it features human beings who actually do use electricity.
  • The Electric Dreams of Thomas Edison: A Guide to Indoor Electrical Safety/A Guide to Outdoor Electrical Safety, produced by the Southern California Edison utility company. In this film, students defy all the rules of logic and physics by somehow communicating with the long-dead Thomas Edison, who informs them about grounding, insulators, and conductors. They also look for outdoor electrical hazards.
  • Zap Rap, from Pacific Learning Systems, Inc. Sure to appeal to the contemporary youngster, this film uses rap-style language to convey the wonders and dangers of electricity. As with most attempts to maintain students’ interest through the use of entertainment as a teaching tool, you might give your kids a quiz to see if they learned anything at all about electricity other than a few tunes.
  • Fire in the Kitchen, from Film Communicators. This video is aimed at grades 7 through 12. There are no wooden puppets or rappin’ electrons here. This video teaches kitchen safety, including proper use of a microwave oven.
  • Our Invisible Friend—Electricity. This 17-minute feature from Marcom Marketing Group also was made for grades 7 through 12. One has to wonder, of course, if any video made for seventh graders could be even remotely interesting to high school seniors.
  • Safety at Home: Electricity, from AIMS Media. Geared for grades 9 through 12, a utility inspector shows careless use of electricity and the inevitable results. The inevitable results in grades 9 through 12 will be hooting and applause as actors are shocked and fried while doing things with appliances, receptacles, and plugs that a three-year-old wouldn’t consider doing.
If my experience with audiovisual presentations when I was in school is still typical of students today (some things really don’t change), I’d suggest that you take your children’s electrical education into your own hands. Take them around the house, show them how the circuit breakers and GFCIs work, even show them how to properly insert and remove a plug from a receptacle. If they’re old enough, turn the power off to a circuit, remove a switch or receptacle, and show them how it’s wired. By the time they start getting bored, you’ll have gotten the basics across.

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