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Years ago I made fire safety books with my preschoolers but at the time I really wasn’t sharing anything more than the idea. Since then, I’ve had lots of requests for the pages of the fire safety book. I finally created all new Preschool Fire Safety Booklet Printables! If you are working on a certain skill or idea, you can print just one page or you can print them all and make a book for a fire safety week activity.
- Cover
- What’s the Number? 911 dialing practice
- Emergency Numbers Coloring/Number Recognition
- Fire Safety Words Vocabulary and Tracing Practice
- Fire Truck Numbers 1-5 Matching/Tracing/Number Recognition
- Fire Truck Coloring Page
- Label the Truck Page
- Look for an EXIT Sign Coloring Page
- Firefighter’s Badge Coloring/Name Writing Page
- My Fire Safety Tip Writing/Dictation Page
- My Fire Painting Page
- Safe To Touch? Discrimination Page
- 2 Fire Safety Certificates (boy/girl)
The link to download the pages is at the bottom of the post.
Fire Safety Matching Cards >>> here
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- Cover
- What’s the Number? 911 dialing practice
- Emergency Numbers Coloring/Number Recognition
- Fire Safety Words Vocabulary and Tracing Practice
- Fire Truck Numbers 1-5 Matching/Tracing/Number Recognition
- Fire Truck Coloring Page
- Label the Truck Page
- Look for an EXIT Sign Coloring Page
- Firefighter’s Badge Coloring/Name Writing Page
- My Fire Safety Tip Writing/Dictation Page
- My Fire Painting Page
- Safe To Touch? Discrimination Page
- 2 Fire Safety Certificates (boy/girl)
Years ago I made fire safety books with my preschoolers but at the time I really wasn’t sharing anything more than the idea. Since then, I’ve had lots of requests for the pages of the fire safety book. I finally created all new Preschool Fire Safety Booklet Printables! If you are working on a certain skill or idea, you can print just one page or you can print them all and make a book for a fire safety week activity.
The link to download the pages is at the bottom of the post.
This post may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Preschool Fire Safety Booklet Printables
Subscribe and be the first to get new ideas and resources for your child and home!
By subscribing to our newsletter, you consent to receive new post updates and occasional related promotional emails.
This printable firefighter craft comes with a template to make it easy for young crafters to make. Learn Create Love
Preschoolers will love to match letters while putting out fires in this hands-on alphabet matching game! Totschooling
Free firefighter-themed printable nonfiction books are a great way to help young readers learn sight words. The Measured Mom
When completing these crafts and activities at home, I find that the following resources are very helpful to have on hand.
Must Have Resources:
Here you can check out more than twenty firefighter coloring pages your preschooler will love! Mom Junction
These fire fighter worksheets will help kids learn valuable skills such as letter sounds, pre-writing practice, matching, pattern making and visual discrimination.
Free firefighter printables for preschool kids! Focus on community helpers and fire safety with these printable learning activities.
This Fire Fighter Do a Dot pack focuses on letter recognition, number recognition, and fine motor skills. Gift of Curiosity
- Institute a “no smoking” policy in the house
- Check all cords and replace any that are frayed or have bare wires
- Switch to flameless candles
- Keep matches and lighters high and out of children’s reach in a locked cabinet
- Plan two ways to escape from each room
- Make sure all doors and windows leading outside open easily
- Identify secondary routes – a window onto an adjacent roof or a collapsible ladder from upper-story windows
- If you live in a multi-story building, plan to use the stairs – never the elevator
- Designate an outside meeting place a safe distance from the house where everyone should meet
In addition to cooking, other top causes of fire include smoking, electrical problems and candles. To minimize risks:
- Install smoke alarms on every level of your home, inside bedrooms and outside sleeping areas on the ceiling or high on the wall
- Keep smoke alarms away from the kitchen, at least 10 feet from the stove, to reduce false alarms
- Use special alarms with strobe lights and bed shakers for people who are hard of hearing or deaf
- Test smoke alarms monthly
- Replace batteries annually, and change the batteries in your carbon monoxide detector at the same time
- Replace smoke alarms that are 10 or more years old
Working Smoke Alarms Are a Must
About three out of five fire deaths happen in homes with no smoke alarms or working smoke alarms. Smoke alarms are a key part of a home fire escape plan providing early warning reducing your risk of dying in a fire. The National Fire Protection Association recommends you:
, a safety observance developed by Nationwide in partnership with NSC and other organizations, is held during Fire Prevention Week in October. Everyone – even children – need to know your family escape plan in case of a fire. The National Fire Protection Association indicates that 71% of Americans have a home fire escape plan but only 47% have practiced it. Practice your fire drill with everyone in the house at night and during the day, twice a year.
- Everyone has left or is leaving the home
- The fire department has been called
- The fire is small, not spreading, and there is not much smoke
- Your back is to an exit you can use quickly
Fire departments and other interested groups are encouraged to join in activities that raise awareness about building safety.
You play a major role in communicating important fire safety and prevention information to the public. Resources on this page will help you make the most of teachable moments.
This May is the 41st annual Building Safety Month, a time to recognize the importance of strengthening, repairing and modernizing our buildings and infrastructure.
USFA creates, reviews and collects resources that can be used in public outreach activities to help keep communities safe from fire.
Outreach materials and educational programs
There are dozens of ways you can use Fire Is Everyone’s Fight to help teach people in your city or town to be safe from fire. Join the fight for a few ideas to get you started.
This immersive 360-degree kitchen fire-safety video lets you choose where to look instead of just sitting back and watching. Look around our kitchen to find the fire hazards. Once you've found them, pan around to see how you can easily fix them and make your kitchen fire safe. (This video works with virtual reality (VR) headsets.)
Retrofitting homes with lower cost sprinkler technologies USFA is funding research to find ways to reduce both the amount of water needed and the complexity of installing sprinklers, while providing time for occupants to escape a fire in their home. Read about our work