Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Educational Knowledge - How to educate children about privacy?
How to educate children about privacy?
Yes, 1. Help children understand their bodies correctly.

When children are older and can understand what adults say, parents can take the opportunity to teach their children to know their bodies correctly. For example, when parents help their children take a bath, or with the help of some picture books and cartoons. Let children know the private parts of the body, let children know the difference between reproductive organs and ordinary organs, and understand that private parts cannot be exposed casually, let alone touched casually.

2. Cultivate gender awareness

Children's gender awareness is subtly cultivated in daily life, which is reflected in children's food, clothing, housing and transportation. Parents should pay attention to preparing clothes and daily necessities for their children. According to their gender, including their names, avoid using male and female names or female and male names. In order to prevent children from being confused about gender at an early age, parents should help their children establish gender awareness.

3. Parents lead by example.

Parents are the best teachers for children, and children follow suit, so parents should set an example in their daily life. For example, close the toilet, change clothes to avoid children, and avoid children when parents interact intimately. Only when parents attach importance to the privacy details in life, create a good family atmosphere and respect children's privacy can children grow up in this environment and better protect their privacy.

4. Answer your child's questions positively.

When children grow up and enter the sensitive period of sex education, they often ask adults some questions about sex education. Many parents are often perfunctory because of embarrassment, or some parents think that their answers are too professional for their children to understand, but they refuse to answer because they are afraid of misleading their children. This is a good opportunity for sex education. Parents can use some professional videos or picture books, and don't shy away from answering.