Important Notice for Educators and Facilitators
This Week Contains Body Safety Content

Week 3 of this curriculum covers body autonomy, consent, correct anatomical names for body parts, safe and unsafe touch, and online safety. This content is age appropriate and research backed and is designed to be delivered in a calm, matter of fact, and empowering way.

Before facilitating this week please ensure you have done the following:

  • Reviewed your mandatory reporting obligations in your province, state, or jurisdiction. In Ontario this means reviewing your duties under the Child Youth and Family Services Act 2017. In other regions check your equivalent child protection legislation.
  • Identified your reporting pathway. Know who you report to, what information you need to provide, and how quickly you are required to act.
  • Informed your school administration or supervisor that you will be covering body safety content this week so they are aware and available if needed.
  • Considered the children in your group. If you are aware of any children with trauma histories related to body safety read the Differentiation and Accessibility notes in each session carefully before you begin.
  • Made yourself available after the session. Children rarely disclose during group activities. Disclosures more often happen quietly afterward in a one on one moment. Build in time to be accessible after this lesson.

This curriculum was designed by Savannah Hall RSW MSW. The inclusion of body safety content reflects both clinical best practice and the research consensus that early, calm, and explicit body safety education is one of the most protective things we can do for children.

If you have questions about facilitating this content or supporting a child who discloses please consult your school counsellor, social worker, or child protection services in your area.

Savannah Hall RSW MSW is not responsible for the actions or omissions of educators or facilitators using this resource. It is the responsibility of each facilitator to know and follow their mandatory reporting obligations in their jurisdiction before using this content.

Rooted Kids Collective · Grades 1 to 3 Edition

Week 3:
My Body My Rules

Unit 1: My Strong Self — Children consolidate interoceptive awareness into clear body safety rules they understand, own, and can articulate. Grades 1 to 3, designed for the classroom and the home.

6 to 9Ages
4Sessions
2Worksheets
4Activity Cards
Rooted Kids Collective · rootedkidscollective.com
Educator and Parent Lesson Plan
Week 3 · Lesson Plan · Grades 1 to 3
My Body My Rules
A complete facilitation guide for parents and educators. Review the notice above before beginning this week.
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Lesson Plan · Week 3 · Unit 1: My Strong Self
Body Safety, Consent, and Trusted Adults
Age Range
Grades 1 to 3 (Ages 6 to 9)
Duration
4 sessions of 20 to 25 minutes each, used flexibly across one week
Big Idea
Children consolidate their interoceptive awareness from Week 2 into a clear set of body safety rules they understand, own, and can articulate. They learn the correct names for all body parts, the rules around who can touch their body and when, and how to recognise and respond when those rules are not respected.
SEL Alignment
CASEL Core Competencies
Self Awareness: accurate self perception, recognising strengths and self confidence
Social Awareness: empathy and taking others perspectives, recognising situational demands
Responsible Decision Making: identifying problems, analysing situations, solving problems
Learning Goals
  • Children can state their body safety rules clearly and in their own words
  • Children can use correct anatomical names for all body parts including private parts
  • Children can identify the difference between safe touch and unsafe touch across a range of scenarios including peer and online contexts
  • Children can describe what to do if their body safety rules are not respected
  • Children can explain the concept of consent in age appropriate language
Materials
This worksheet set, pencils or pens, coloured pencils optional
Session 1
approx 25 min
My Body Safety Rules
Begin by connecting to Week 2. Ask children: Last week we talked about listening to your body. This week we are going to talk about the rules that protect it.

Introduce the concept that every person has body safety rules. These are not rules made by someone else. They are rules that belong to you because your body belongs to you.

Introduce the core body safety rules one at a time. After each rule ask children what they think it means and why it matters before giving any explanation. Their understanding first. Your framing second.

My Body Safety Rules for Grades 1 to 3:
  • My body belongs to me
  • I know the correct names for all my body parts
  • Private parts are the parts covered by my bathing suit
  • Nobody touches my private parts except to keep me safe or healthy and a trusted adult is always present
  • I can say no to any touch that does not feel right even from people I love and even if I cannot explain why
  • If something feels wrong I tell a trusted adult right away even if I was asked to keep it secret
  • Secrets about bodies are never okay to keep
  • I ask before I touch someone else
  • I listen and stop when someone says no to me
  • My private parts stay private in photos and online too
Therapist Note — Self Determination and Body Autonomy

Hall (2023), drawing on Reid-Merritt (2010), frames self determination as the foundation of liberation work. Knowing what belongs to you, what you value, and having that count is not just an emotional skill. It is a political and protective one.

Body autonomy is one of the earliest and most concrete sites where children can practise self determination. When a child says no to unwanted touch and that no is respected, they are rehearsing the internal process they will rely on in every future situation where their boundaries are tested.

The rules in this session are not a script to memorise. They are a framework for children to internalise and eventually make their own. Encourage children to rewrite these rules in their own words. Their version is the one that will actually stay with them.

Hall, S. (2023). Shaping identities: How social work education made me white. Master of Social Work Thesis, McMaster University.
Reid-Merritt, P. (2010). Righteous self determination: The black social work movement in America. Inprint Editions.

Session 2
approx 20 min
Names Matter
Introduce or reinforce correct anatomical names for all body parts. For Grades 1 to 3 children should already have some familiarity with these terms. This session normalises their use and addresses any confusion or embarrassment that may have developed.

Explain clearly and matter of factly: Every part of your body has a real name. Using the real name is important because:
  • It helps you communicate clearly if something happens
  • It helps adults understand exactly what you mean
  • It tells the adults around you that you know your body and you take it seriously
  • It removes shame from parts of the body that deserve no shame
Body parts and their correct names: Head, shoulders, chest, breasts, stomach, back, bottom, buttocks, penis, testicles, vulva, vagina, arms, hands, legs, feet

Private parts: the parts covered by a bathing suit. Penis and testicles or vulva and vagina, bottom and buttocks, chest and breasts for girls and women.
Therapist Note — Why Anatomical Names Protect Children

Research consistently shows that children who know the correct anatomical names for their body parts are more likely to disclose abuse, more likely to be understood when they do, and more likely to be believed by adults and in legal contexts.

Using nicknames or euphemisms, while well intentioned, can create confusion and make it harder for children to communicate clearly if something happens to them.

Using correct anatomical terms in a calm matter of fact tone teaches children that their whole body is normal, nameable, and worth talking about. It removes shame and builds the communication confidence that keeps children safer.

For children who giggle or react with embarrassment: this is completely normal and expected. Acknowledge it briefly and continue matter of factly. The adult's calm normalises the language faster than any explanation will.

Tobin, J., Specker, S., and Mullamphy, D. (2020). Early childhood educators and the prevention of child sexual abuse. Early Childhood Education Journal.
Darkness to Light (2023). Stewards of Children. darknesstolightorg

Session 3
approx 25 min
Safe Touch, Unsafe Touch, and Online Safety
Move through a range of scenarios that reflect the real social world of Grades 1 to 3 children. These scenarios are more complex than the PreK version and include peer pressure elements and basic online safety contexts.

Explain the categories:
  • Safe touch: touch that is consensual, appropriate, and feels comfortable
  • Unsafe touch: touch that is not consensual, involves private parts without appropriate reason, feels wrong, or is secretive
  • Online safety: private parts stay private in photos, videos, and online communication too
Use the scenario cards on Worksheet 2 for this session. Children work in pairs first then discuss as a group.

Key messages to reinforce throughout:
  • A dare is not consent
  • A secret about your body is never okay to keep
  • If you are not sure it is always okay to say I need to think about it
  • Telling a trusted adult is not getting someone in trouble. It is keeping yourself safe.
Facilitator Script

You: Last week we talked about what your body knows. This week we are talking about the rules that protect what your body knows.

I want to start with something important. Your body safety rules apply everywhere. At home, at school, with friends, with family, and online.

Let me say that again. Online too.

If anyone ever asks you to share a photo of your private parts, or sends you a photo of theirs, or asks you to do something on a screen that involves your body in a way that feels wrong, those are your body safety rules being broken. Online.

You do not have to figure out what to do alone. You tell a trusted adult. That is the rule.

Now we are going to look at some scenarios together. These are situations that real kids your age encounter. I want you to work with a partner first and think about what you would do.

Remember: there is no perfectly right answer for every situation. What matters is that you know your rules and you trust what your body is telling you.

Session 4
approx 20 min
What To Do When Rules Are Broken
This session focuses on the action steps children take when something happens that breaks their body safety rules. Emphasise throughout that this is never the child's fault and that telling a trusted adult is always the right move regardless of what they were told.

The steps when something happens:
  • 1Trust your body. If it feels wrong it is worth paying attention to.
  • 2Say no or stop if you can. You do not have to explain yourself.
  • 3Get away from the situation if you can.
  • 4Tell a trusted adult as soon as possible. Even if you were told to keep it secret. Especially if you were told to keep it secret.
  • 5If the first adult does not help, tell another one. Keep telling until someone helps you.
Introduce the concept of a safety network: A safety network is the group of trusted adults in your life you can go to if something happens. Ideally you have at least three people in your safety network.

Children complete the safety network section of Worksheet 2.
Therapist Note — Disclosures

This session may prompt disclosures. Before facilitating this content review your mandatory reporting obligations and ensure you know your school or organisation reporting pathway.

If a child discloses during or after this session: Stay calm. Thank them for telling you. Do not ask leading questions. Tell them it is not their fault. Tell them you are going to help them. Follow your mandatory reporting protocol immediately.

Children rarely disclose in the middle of a group session. More often disclosures happen quietly after, in a one on one moment. Make yourself available after this session.

Differentiation

For children who have experienced abuse or trauma: This content can be activating. Watch for signs of withdrawal, distress, or dysregulation. Offer the option to step out with a trusted adult. Never require participation in scenario work for this week.

For children who minimise or dismiss body safety content: Do not push or debate. Plant the seed clearly and move on. The information is now in them even if they do not show it.

For children who ask very specific questions that suggest personal experience: Follow your disclosure protocol. Do not explore the question in the group setting.

Accessibility Note

The scenario sorting activity on Worksheet 2 can be completed verbally in a one on one setting for children who find group work activating for this topic.

All written responses can be completed verbally with a trusted adult recording the child's answers on their behalf.

Recommended Books
Recommended Books for This Week
Stories That Support This Week's Theme
My Body Is Private
Linda Walvoord Girard
A clear and calm introduction to body privacy and the difference between safe and unsafe touch. Written at exactly the right level for Grades 1 to 3 and directly supports the body safety rules framework of this week.
Talk About It Together
  • What is one body safety rule from this book that you want to make sure you always remember? Why that one?
  • The book talks about trusted adults. Who are the three adults in your life you would tell if something did not feel right?
Let's Talk About Body Boundaries Rules and Safety
Jayneen Sanders
Covers body boundaries, consent, and safety rules in a way that is explicit enough to be genuinely useful without being frightening. Includes discussion questions that complement this week's scenario work.
Talk About It Together
  • What is the difference between a safe secret and an unsafe secret? Can you think of an example of each?
  • If someone broke one of your body safety rules and told you to keep it secret, what would you do? Who would you tell first?
No Means No
Jayneen Sanders
Reinforces assertive boundary language and the absolute right to say no to any touch that does not feel comfortable. The peer scenario focus makes it particularly relevant for Grades 1 to 3 where peer pressure around physical contact begins to emerge.
Talk About It Together
  • The main character says no even when it is uncomfortable to do so. What made it hard? What made it possible?
  • Has there ever been a time you said no to something physical and it felt hard to do? What helped you or what do you wish had helped you?
Worksheet 1 · Student Printable
Worksheet 1 · Week 3
My Body Safety Rules In My Own Words
Name:
Date:
Read each body safety rule below. Then rewrite it in your own words in the space next to it. Your version is the one that will stick.
My body belongs to me
I know the correct names for all my body parts
Nobody touches my private parts without a safe reason and a trusted adult present
I can say no even to people I love
Secrets about bodies are never okay to keep
I ask before I touch someone else
My private parts stay private online too
The body safety rule that feels most important to me is:
This rule matters to me because:
If this rule was ever broken I would tell:
Name 1
Name 2
Name 3
If the first person did not help me I would:
Worksheet 2 · Student Printable
Worksheet 2 · Week 3
Scenario Sorting and My Safety Network
Name:
Date:
Section 1: What Would You Do?
Read each scenario. Circle whether it is SAFE, UNSAFE, or DEPENDS. Then write what you would do.
Scenario 1
A friend dares you to show them your private parts to prove you are not scared.
Safe
Unsafe
Depends
What would you do?
Scenario 2
A doctor needs to examine a part of your body to check if you are healthy. Your parent is in the room.
Safe
Unsafe
Depends
What would you do?
Scenario 3
An older child sends you a photo of their private parts on a device.
Safe
Unsafe
Depends
What would you do?
Scenario 4
A classmate keeps touching your hair even after you asked them to stop.
Safe
Unsafe
Depends
What would you do?
Scenario 5
A family member wants a hug and you do not feel like it today.
Safe
Unsafe
Depends
What would you do?
Scenario 6
Someone tells you something happened to them but makes you promise not to tell.
Safe
Unsafe
Depends
What would you do?
Section 2: My Safety Network
A safety network is the group of trusted adults you can go to if something happens. You need at least three people. They can be family members, teachers, school counsellors, coaches, or any adult you trust.
1
Name of trusted adult
Why I trust them
How I would reach them
2
Name of trusted adult
Why I trust them
How I would reach them
3
Name of trusted adult
Why I trust them
How I would reach them
If I ever feel unsafe the first thing I will do is:
Activity Cards · Print and Cut Apart
Week 3 · Activity Cards
Practise and Explore
Four activities to extend the week's learning. Use in class, at home, or in pairs and small groups.
Activity Card 1 · Pairs or Small Group · 10 Minutes
Body Safety Rules Quiz

Test each other on the body safety rules. One person asks the question. The other answers.


Questions to use:
  • Whose body is your body?
  • What are private parts?
  • Can you say no to a hug from someone you love?
  • What should you do if someone asks you to keep a secret about your body?
  • Do body safety rules apply online?
  • If a trusted adult does not help you what should you do?
  • What is the difference between a safe secret and an unsafe secret?

After the quiz talk about:
  • Which rule feels easiest to remember?
  • Which one feels hardest to use in real life?
Activity Card 2 · Solo Activity · 10 Minutes
Rewrite the Rule

Pick three body safety rules that matter most to you. Rewrite each one in your own words so it sounds like you.


Rule 1 in my words
Rule 2 in my words
Rule 3 in my words

Now read them out loud to yourself. Do they sound like you? Do they feel true? These are your rules now.

Activity Card 3 · Solo Then Share · 15 Minutes
The Trusted Adult Network

Complete this on your own then share it with one of the people you write down.


My three trusted adults are:
1
2
3
For each one complete this sentence:
I trust them because...
The way I would start the conversation if I needed to tell them something hard is:

I need to tell you something and I need you to really listen.

Practise saying that sentence out loud right now. Three times. It gets easier every time you say it.

Activity Card 4 · Discussion · 15 Minutes · Adult Nearby
Online Safety Scenarios

Talk through each scenario together. What would you do? Who would you tell?


Scenario 1: Someone online asks you to share a photo of yourself in your underwear. They say it is just for fun.

Scenario 2: A game you are playing online asks you to turn on your camera and show your body to get more points.

Scenario 3: A friend sends you a photo of someone else without clothes and asks you to send it to another person.

Scenario 4: Someone online tells you they will stop being your friend if you do not send them a photo of yourself.

For each scenario talk about:
  • What is the unsafe part of this situation?
  • What would you do immediately?
  • Who would you tell and what would you say?