Pedestrian Safety, Teens Ages 15 to 19 Years
What can I do to keep my teen safe as a pedestrian?
- Be a positive role model and set an example for safe pedestrian behavior. Children and young adults learn by watching parents.
- When dropping teens off from a vehicle, make sure they exit the vehicle on the right hand side onto the sidewalk or shoulder.
What should my teen do to be a safe pedestrian?
Teens should follow the following rules of the road:
- Obey all traffic signs and signals
- Stop, and look left, right and left again before entering a roadway
- Never run into the street; always cross at the crosswalk or corner. When crossing at an intersection, pedestrians should check for vehicles turning the corner.
- Always walk on the sidewalk. If there are no sidewalks, pedestrians should walk facing traffic.
- Make eye contact with drivers of stopped vehicles to be sure they are aware that you are crossing the street.
What types of safety features do pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods have?
- Sidewalks
- Physical barriers to separate pedestrians from the roadway (such as wide shoulders and strips of landscaping between the road and sidewalk)
- "Traffic calming measures" (such as median barriers or speed humps)
- Crossing guards and speed enforcement in school zones
What can my teen wear to be safer as a pedestrian?
- Children should wear bright colored clothing or retro-reflective material designed to make pedestrians more visible.
- Bright or retro-reflective material is especially important if children are walking at dusk or at night.
Where can I find more information?
- American Academy of Pediatrics
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- National Center for Safe Routes to School
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
- New York City Department of Transportation
- New York State Department of Health
- New York State Department of Transportation
- New York State Governor's Traffic Safety Committee
- Safe Kids Worldwide