Approved First Aid Training - Red Cross Babysitters Course
Because caring for children is more than just child's play.
As parents of young children, has your favourite babysitter taken a Canadian Red Cross Babysitting Course?
You're an adolescent of 11 years old or older and you've decided to become a babysitter; are you prepared for this important responsibility? For example, do you know how to:
Feed a baby or change a diaper?
Prepare a simple meal?
Play games with children of all ages?
Prevent injuries and keep children safe?
Handle an emergency if one happens?
A good babysitter knows all of these things and more. Learning them can be easy and fun with the Red Cross Babysitting Course. The newly revised Babysitting Course is updated for today's youth.
For many young adolescents, babysitting is their first job, and the Red Cross can help them become real "pros"! They learn valuable tips for managing their business, as well as:
Important child care skills
Safety tips for children of all ages
How to cope with common problems, like tantrums and crying
What to do if anything makes the babysitter uncomfortable
Some great games and other ideas for having fun with the kids while babysitting
How to make the children's environment safe and enjoyable
What are the respective rights and responsibilities of the babysitter and the family hiring one
What to do in case of an emergency?
Emergencies sometimes do happen, even to the best babysitters. The Babysitting Course teaches youth how to handle emergencies with confidence by providing the basic first aid skills for such common problems as:
Choking
Sprains and Strains
Bleeding
Poisoning
Burns
Fire emergency
And more!
The newly revised Babysitting Course is updated for today's youth. Hours to complete the course: 7.5 hours.
If you love children and you would like to babysit, or already do, or if you know someone who might need babysitting training, the Red Cross Babysitting Course is only eight hours long and is offered almost everywhere: in your community, at school, with youth groups, even in homes.
Reference: www.redcross.ca