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Camphill Primary School, Ballymena
NEW UNIFORM orders placed online during May /early June - will be home at the start of this week.......... | Our 2026 Primary 7s leave us this Wednesday - best wishes to all the pupils as they embark on their new journey at Post Primary School. | School closes for all P1-P6 pupils (with the exception of Junior & Senior Choir members) at 1pm on Wednesday 24th June. There is no Little or Big Stars on Wednesday. | P1-P6 parents - your child's Annual School Report will be issued on Thursday 25th June - your child will receive this in a sealed envelope to take home. If your child is not in school this Thursday the report can then be collected from the School Office or alternatively on receipt of a Stamped addressed envelope, school will post the report.  | P1-P6 pupils will be having some fun on Bouncy Castles on Friday this week - a Thank you gift from our P7s as part of supporting their Young Enterprise Sale earlier this month. All pupils may come to school wearing their own choice of bottoms/shorts and trainers. | Good luck to some of our senior pupils sitting music exams this week! | P6 parents - a deposit is due before this Wednesday if your child is planning on going on the P7 Residential Trip in June 2027. | Next Monday & Tuesday are both non-uniform days - school finishes at 3pm as normal next Monday however any P3-P6 pupil wishing to go home with siblings at 2pm can be collected from their cloakroom doors at this time.  School will finish at 12noon on Tuesday 30th June. Buses will  run on Mon. 29th June as normal and Tues. 30th June at 12noon.  | Little Stars/Big Stars finishes this Friday - there will be no LS/BS next Monday or Tuesday.  | Holiday clubs/summer schemes - Flyers for a range of Holiday Bible Clubs/summer schemes are home with all pupils this week.. | 'Free School Meal and Uniform allowance' applications for the 26/27 new school year OPEN via the EA Connect portal - see NEWS - 2/6/26.. | School Uniform - online shop (under PARENTS area) now open for orders up until Friday 24th July. | Have a look inside our school building by viewing our new 3D TOUR on the HOME page of our website..... go on a tour by clicking and following the little person icon...
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Road Safety Education - Week 3 Task (Child Passenger Safety)

16th Jun 2020

Dear Parent,

Road Safety Education - Week 3 Task (Child Passenger Safety)

 

This week the focus is on passenger safety and you can conduct this task without even starting the car!  There is also a follow up activity supplied by Department for Infrastructure ‘Safe and Accessible Travel’ (attached) which can be printed out and completed by your child if you wish.  However, these are not intended to take the place of the task itself but rather to reinforce the learning.

 

1.       First thing is first – check the height of your child.  The law states that all children up to 135cm (approximately 4ft 5in) in height AND under 12 years of age, must use a suitable child restraint – that is, one that is suitable for your child’s height or weight.

2.       Next, look for a sticker or label on the child car seats that are used for each child and it will show which of the two European standards for child restraint systems it has been manufactured to - Regulation 44 and Regulation 129 (or i-Size).  Seats manufactured to either standard will have a label showing a capital ‘E’ in a circle - as shown in the picture:

-          Regulation 44 child car seats are based on weight with an age recommendation.

-          Regulation 129 (or i-Size) child car seats are based on height/ length and have a maximum weight (the label will tell you the weight or maximum height/length the child car seat is designed for).

ECE R44 and ECE R129 conformance labels should show the weight and/or height category for the product, the country of approval ("E11" for example, means England) and the unique approval number

3.      Assuming the child car seat is still appropriate for the child it is being used for (given the above), now it’s time to check the seat is being used properly.  Every year too many children are killed or seriously injured – often because they are not properly restrained when travelling in a car. So make sure you understand the law and give your child the best possible protection.  Many seat experts believe that it's better and safer to keep your child in the lowest group seat for as long as possible. This means staying in their current stage seat until the maximum weight or height limit is reached.  Because children grow and develop at different rates it is important to keep a watch on your child’s height and weight to make sure that they don’t move up a stage too early or too late. You must only use a child restraint if your car’s seat belt has a diagonal strap, unless the child restraint is:

-          specifically designed for use with a lap seat belt only;

-          fitted using ISOFIX anchor points.

Checklist

  • follow the manufacturer's instructions (refer to the diagrams on the side of the seat or better still using the instruction manual provided at the time of purchase);
  • where using an adult belt to secure the restraint - make sure it passes through all the right slots;
  • make sure that the child restraint is tight in the adult seat;
  • make certain that the adult seat belt buckle is not bent over or resting on the child restraint frame;
  • never fit a rear-facing restraint with an active airbag in front of it;
  • check the vehicle handbook and follow the advice about children and airbags - where fitted;
  • deactivate any front airbags before fitting a rear-facing (baby) restraint in a front seat;
  • never modify the restraint or adult seat belt to make it fit;
  • never fit a child restraint in side-facing seats;
  • where the seat belt is being used to restrain the child (booster seats/booster cushions), ensure the diagonal belt is not resting on the child’s throat (there may be an adjuster so that the seat belt rests on the shoulder)

Some general safety points:

  • every trip - allow time to get the child comfortably strapped in;
  • where possible, ensure children sit in the back seat;
  • make sure everyone is in their seat and properly restrained (that includes adults!) before moving off;
  • remind children not to distract the driver by shouting or fighting (!) during the journey;
  • assist young children to get out of the car;
  • insist on children exiting car on the pavement (or grass verge).  If they are not sitting at that side, they could move across the back seat when the vehicle stops;

For further information on seat belts and child car seats (restraints): https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/articles/child-car-seats-restraints-and-seatbelts

 

For information from manufacturers and retailers on whether a particular child car seat will fit in your vehicle and how you should install it: https://www.childcarseats.org.uk/choosing-using/child-car-seat-fitting-and-compatibility/

 

To view the road safety calendars issued to schools: https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/articles/road-safety-teaching-aid-calendars

 

Remember – seat belts (and child car restraints) save lives!