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TALC’s
Safe Routes to Schools Program (SR2S)
Safe Routes to
Schools (SR2S) Alameda County, spearheaded by
TALC, is a collaboration of TALC, the Alameda
County Public Health Department, Cycles of Change,
and many other local agencies and organizations.
The program provides trainings, resources and
customized support at no cost; while working
together with schools, parents, and the local
community to give kids an active, healthy start to
the school day, reduce traffic congestion, and
improve environmental health.
Read TALC’s report,
Bringing Safe Routes to Scale, describing the
need for new funding for the nine-county Bay Area
so that every community can enjoy the benefits of
Safe Routes to Schools. This report helped
persuade the Metropolitan Transportation
Commission to adopt the recommendation for a
regional Safe Routes program at their July 2008
meeting.
The Safe Routes to
Schools Program is funded in part with a major
grant from Measure B -- Alameda County's half cent
transportation sales tax, administered by
ACTIA.
September 2008: SR2S
Walking School Bus program was covered on
ABC 7 news.
General SR2S
Information
Participating
Alameda County Schools
All schools
participating in Safe Routes to Schools are
grouped into task forces according to geography.
These task forces meet monthly bring together
parent and community leaders from each school;
city and county agency representatives; teachers
and many other interested parties to discuss
strategies to promote safe routes in our
communities. Click the links below to learn more
about what task forces throughout Alameda County
are doing to promote safe and healthy ways of
getting to school. Within each task force you will
find links to pictures, events and news regarding
each individual school
Berkeley Task
Force
Usually meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month from
6:00-8:00p.m.
1835 Allston Way, Berkeley
For information contact (510) 740-3150
Oakland Task Force
Usually meets on the 2nd Thursday of the month
from 9:00-10:00a.m.
Locations vary
For information contact (510) 740-3150
Unincorporated Areas of Alameda County Task
Force
Usually meets on the 3rd Wednesday of the
month from 9:30-10:30a.m.
Supervisor Nate Miley’s Office
20999 Redwood Road, Castro Valley
Participating Alameda County Schools
Albany Unified School District
Cornell Elementary
Marin Elementary
Ocean View Elementary
Berkeley Unified School District
Berkeley Arts Magnet Elementary
Jefferson Elementary
Malcolm X Elementary
Oxford Elementary
Rosa Parks Elementary
Thousand Oaks Elementary
Washington Elementary
King Middle School
Longfellow Middle School
Oakland Unified School District
Achieve Academy Elementary
Allendale Elementary
Bella Vista Elementary
Chabot Elementary
Crocker Highlands Elementary
Franklin Elementary
Garfield Elementary
Global Family School
Learning Without Limits Elementary
Manzanita Community School
Manzanita SEED Elementary
Montclair Elementary
Peralta Elementary
Alliance Academy Middle School
Bret Harte Middle School
Edna Brewer Middle School
Roosevelt Middle School
Unincorporated Areas of Alameda County Schools
Castro Valley Elementary
Cherryland Elementary
Colonial Acres Elementary
Fairview Elementary
Grant Elementary
Hillside Elementary
Marshall Elementary
Walking to School
Makes a World of Difference
Only one generation ago, most children
walked to school. Today, only one in ten
children walk to school regularly...
The effects of this trend are not hard to
come across.
Nationally,
since the mid 1960’s rates of
childhood obesity have increased
exponentially from 4% TO 16%, while the
number of walking and bicycling trips made
by children have fallen by 65%.
Walking
to school has countless benefits:
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Increases the amount of
time devoted to physical activity, which
helps reduce a child’s risk of obesity
and various associated health problems.
-
Improves concentration
and increases alertness, like all
physical activity.
-
Enhances safety in the
area around the school by reducing
traffic.
-
Makes children more self
sufficient, an important part of
developing social skills.
-
Empowers children to
contribute to the environment, by
traveling pollution-free.
-
Encourage children to
learn about and get to know the
neighborhood and community members.
-
Provides a great
opportunity to develop healthy life-long
habits of enjoying physical activity.
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Is the perfect
opportunity for family quality time!
What Our Program Has
to Offer
Our program is available to any school
in Alameda County that can provide
parent and staff enthusiasm, support and
volunteer power to champion the Safe
Routes to Schools Program in the
school. Our staff partners with your
school to provide resources, training,
and technical assistance. Our program
is based on the comprehensive 5 E’s
model: Education, Encouragement,
Enforcement, Engineering, and
Evaluation. We encourage schools to
address all 5 E’s through the programs,
tools, and assistance we provide.
However, it is also possible to start
out with only one or two programs in
place.
Read on to find out more about the
programs we offer to schools at no cost
or download
our program menu.
Education
- Our education program offers fun and
exciting tools to introduce and
reinforce pedestrian, bike and “street
smart” safety skills children need to
travel confidently and independently.
Also included are assessment checklists
which are designed to inform parent’s
decisions on whether a child is ready to
travel to school on his/her own or with
a group of friends.
Programs, Tools and Materials:
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Complete assembly program, A Breath
of Fresh Air: The Walk and Roll
Solution.
This comic and educational puppet
assembly follows the story of a young
boy’s adventure on the journey to
school. The assembly has been tailored
to appeal to two audiences: K-3 and
4&5th grades. This activity is an
excellent way to kick off a Safe Routes
campaign at your school or boost
enthusiasm for an ongoing program.
Contact us to book an
assembly at your school.
-
Safe Moves Pedestrian Rodeo.
This child-sized mock city is designed to provide realistic
examples of different traffic
environments and is used to create
problem-solving experiences for grades
K-3.
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Bicycle Rodeo.
Available in certain areas of Alameda County.
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Bicycle PE Program.
This 8-hour curriculum is provided for 5th graders in the
form of a one and a half day activity,
or through several days of PE periods.
The program lends the school a fleet of
bicycles, helmets, and cycling
instructors that will work alongside the
PE or classroom teacher. Ultimately,
the program will assist young people in
developing bicycle control, safety
navigation skills, and a clear
understanding of the rules of the road.
Schools must provide a secure location
to store 30 bicycles for the duration of
the program.
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After School Youth Bike Safety
Certification and Ride Club Training.
This 6-hour training is provided twice a
year for after school program providers
interested in running 8-hour on-the-bike
trainings. Programs that send a
representative to this training will be
eligible to receive a full fleet of
bikes and helmets to implement this
program for an entire month.
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Teacher training and tools, On the
Move: out of the Box Ideas for Teaching
Pedestrian Safety.
This workshop provides classroom and PE
teachers with classroom and field-based
tools to instill basic pedestrian safety
skills in children. Customized for
children from K-5. This tool is
available as a one-on-one or group
training, as well as in a manual.
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In-Class Curriculum, The Standard
Stroll: Linking Lessons from the School
Journey to State Standards.
Age-appropriate educational materials created according to
state standards, which address topics
such as mapping, community, and the
impact of travel on global warming.
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Parent and Guardian Training, Step By
Step: A Parent’s Safety Guide for
Raising Kids who get Around on Human
Power.
This 20-minute workshop provides parents
and guardians with a background on how
kids see differently than adults and how
to model, coach and observe children’s
pedestrian habits. Perfect for
audiences of parent groups, such as
PTA’s.
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Parent Training, Prepare, Don’t Scare.
This parent workshop empowers parents by debunking common
myths about kidnappings and strangers,
and provides useful strategies to ensure
that your child is prepared to avoid
potentially dangerous situations and how
to react if they happen.
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Family Cycling Clinic.
This parent/child workshop is designed
to give the next generation of cyclists
(and their parents) the skills and
confidence to ride their bikes on
today’s roads. This 3-hour course
provides classroom, blacktop and
on-the-bike drills and activities.
Participating youth will leave with
increased ability to control a bicycle,
safe navigation skills, and clear
understanding of the rules of the road.
Participating parents will leave with
the skills and tools to decide if their
children are ready to bike to school
independently.
Encouragement -
Walking to school is fun for everyone
and a great way to strengthen your
school community. Our encouragement
program provides trainings for parents
and volunteers who lead encouragement
events in their school, such as walk to
school day or walking school buses (a
group of children walking to school with
one or two adult leaders).
Programs, Tools and Materials:
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International Walk to School Day
Celebration.
The first Wednesday of October marks
International Walk to School Day.
Safe Routes to Schools Alameda County
ensures that cities and schools
throughout Alameda County are on the map
for this international celebration by
providing tools, trainings, materials,
banners and prizes for any school
interested in participating. This
activity is an excellent kick off
activity for a year-round Safe Routes
campaign in your school!
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Themed monthly Walk and Roll to School
Days.
Weekly or monthly walk to school days
are the best way to work active
transportation into your school
culture. Safe Routes to Schools Alameda
County supports any school undertaking
this effort by providing materials and
give-aways for different themes every
month.
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Bike to School Day.
Similar to Walk to School Days, Bike to
School Days encourage kids who have
bikes to use these wonderful machines to
get to school. We provide materials,
safety flyers, and giveaways for any
schools in the county that wish to
celebrate this activity.
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Walking School Bus.
We provide workshops, materials and
technical assistance for schools and
neighborhoods interested in starting a
program to encourage children to walk to
school in groups supervised by parents
or other adults. Biking School Trains
are a great alternative for children on
bicycles.
-
Encouragement Contests.
We offer to customize school-wide
contests or school challenges for any
schools with the capacity to coordinate
these activities. Contests highlight
pollution reduction and miles traveled
on human power by the school community.
Engineering
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Walking to school is more safe and
relaxing if your school neighborhood has
adequate pedestrian infrastructure such
as sidewalks, marked crossings, and bulb
outs. We’ve partnered with an
SR2S-experienced design firm to conduct
community walk audits, bringing school
staff, parents, traffic safety officers,
and city engineers to identify
infrastructure needs for safe walking
and biking to school. The walkabout will
then guide a community envisioning
workshop which will result in a
conceptual plan for the area surrounding
the school. Schools demonstrating
commitment to the SR2S program are
eligible for the walk-about and
conceptual plan process at no cost to
the school. Through our city and
district-wide task forces, we will
submit the resulting document to public
works staff and encourage them to use
these documents to apply for funding
toward these crucial improvements.
Enforcement -
Our program will work closely with
traffic safety officers to ensure that
school efforts to increase walking and
biking to school are not undermined by
traffic and parking violations. Parents
and staff also play a key role in
enforcement, educating parents and
neighbors on traffic and parking
regulations that keep school streets
safe for walking and biking children.
Certain cities may also be able to
organize “safety patrols” in which older
elementary school children are entrusted
to keep drop-off time in order.
Evaluation: The Alameda County
Department of Public Health will conduct
thorough evaluation of our program and
individual components. Evaluation outcomes
will inform us on how to make our programs
even better and ensure equity in the
schools we’re working with.
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Student Surveys (coming soon)
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Parent Surveys (coming soon)
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Training Evaluations (coming soon)
Our Partners: We’ve partnered with
some incredible agencies and organizations
that will provide expertise and exciting
resources to our Alameda County wide
program. Below are links to some of our
partners’ websites:
Stay tuned to our website! We are busy
planning our program and putting together
our tools and materials, which will be
available online this fall. If you’re
interested in having SR2S in your school,
give us a call
at the number below.
Materials for
downloading
Download Safe Routes to Schools materials
here.
Contact us
For more information about starting a SR2S
program in your school, contact us at
(510) 740-3150 or
SR2S@transcoalition.org.
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