Teacher Resources

How can I use this curriculum?

This curriculum is designed to be viewed in school, and if possible, sent home with kids to review with their parents or other family members. In runs about 15 minutes, and can be viewed in a web browser on either desktop or mobile operating systems. The curriculum can stand on its own, but like all education materials, it works best in conjunction with discussion and practice.

Understanding the Training Message

In our curriculum, we describe two sets of rules (more on that below). We say in the training that the safety rules we teach are the same for everyone, all the way from kids who are just learning to shoot, through to the top level competitors in the world. That’s not an exaggeration, at least in the case of the safe gun handling rules we teach. The basics of treating guns as if they’re loaded, not pointing them at other people or oneself, and keeping the finger away from the trigger are core to every shooting discipline, from hunting to the shotgun sports to police and military training to action pistol and rifle competitions – people in every corner of the shooting sports and firearms practice know and follow these rules, and injuries typically involve people breaking all the rules simultaneously.

Safe firearm storage is, of course, a critical responsibility of every gun owner, just as everyone with a driver’s license is responsible to drive sober, at reasonable speeds, and with full attention to the road. In other words, it’s an important standard to live by, but we can’t assume it always works for all people. In the case of car crashes, we use car seats, seat belts, and crash-tested vehicles to secure kids. For guns that kids may come across, the protection is something they carry with them – it’s their knowledge of gun safety.

So, we encourage everyone to store firearms safely; and despite our commitment to safe firearm storage, we also encourage families to review the safety rules or this curriculum occasionally, for the benefit of all family members.

Either at home or in the classroom, we suggest putting a hypothetical scenario like the one from this training to students. Also, we believe kids are distinguishing and making judgments about what’s normal for them, and kids and families should feel free to exceed our standards if it’s relevant to their situation. (For example, we fully support a parent setting the standard, “If you ever see a gun other than grandpa’s rifles in his gun case, you have to come tell me or another adult right away.”)

We also detail a muzzle direction exercise and discussion (below) if you’d like to help strengthen your students’ understanding of muzzle direction from this curriculum.

Why do we teach these rules?

This curriculum is designed specifically for communities with higher-than-average rates of gun ownership and engagement in the shooting sports. In such communities (including our own!), we face three truths about kids and guns:

It’s likely that most kids could encounter a gun at some time during their youth.
Some kids see guns frequently, such as hanging above a mantle or in a gun cabinet at home or in a relative’s home.

Kids in communities like ours are more likely than their peers in other places to be invited to handle or shoot guns, either as a child or later in life as an adult.
We recognize that there’s a wide range of opinions about these truths, but for the purpose of safety training, each of these scenarios deserves some attention in this curriculum.

First, kids should never touch guns without adult supervision, period. That’s the core message of Be Safe – students need to develop the sense never to touch guns that they come across when they’re by themselves or while playing with friends, whether they see guns regularly or not.

However, many national-level curricula on gun safety for kids miss the important cultural truth above (number two): Some kids see guns regularly. If we use a one-size-fits-all approach and tell kids to go find an adult every time they see a gun, it tells those kids who see guns every day that the message isn’t for them, because they realize just as you do how impractical it is to run and tell mom every time they enter the living room and see a rifle hanging over the fireplace. As a result, they internalize that the entire enterprise of learning about gun safety just doesn’t pertain to them, even though these kids will probably have many more opportunities to apply gun safety knowledge than their peers with less exposure to guns.

Finally, we want to ensure that everyone in our communities – yes, even you! – is aware of the industry-standard rules of safe gun handling, even if they never expect to handle a gun personally. There are lots of good reasons to know these rules, even if only to identify when someone else is being unsafe with a gun. Even if a given child will likely never touch or handle a gun later in life, having an innate understanding of gun safety is valuable.

We also hope to propagate the understanding that using eye and ear protection is a fundamental part of gun safety when any shooting is happening, and that some items like air rifles and BB guns may not be real guns, but we should know how to treat them, and we should treat them essentially like real guns.

Why don’t we teach Rule 4 as “Know your target and beyond”? This is a perfectly fine rule, and families should feel free to make it one of their safety rules if they shoot guns. However, with limited time and attention, we chose to get messaging about eye and ear protection in front of kids and families instead. Knowing your target beyond is more critical in some shooting scenarios than others, requires a more nuanced explanation, and only pertains to the person shooting; whereas eye and ear protection pertain to everyone nearby, and to nearly all shooting contexts.

Muzzle Direction Exercise

Below, you’ll find a description of a discussion and hands-on exercise you can use to help establish the idea of muzzle direction.

This description was written for parents, and you are welcome to pass it along to them. Part 3 may not work in a classroom setting, or you may need to adapt it, but parts 1 and 2 work well with any size of group.

Part 1: Explain what’s OK to point at.

In Be Safe, we describe the muzzle direction rule this way: “Never point the muzzle at anything it wouldn’t be OK to put a bullet hole in.” Obviously, this phrase is intuitive, but could use some explanation. We suggest that you explain to your child that you obviously don’t want them to make holes in a tree or the floor or ceiling, but that “OK” in this case means something different – that the idea is to not put bullet holes in people (or pets, or any animals, if you prefer), and by comparison, putting a hole in the floor or a tree is no big deal if were an accident. Answer any questions, even the obnoxious ones – this is your child engaging with the concept, which is good.

Part 2: Critique me!

Next, find any object that can stand in for a gun. A toy gun, a stick, a pencil, or even your “finger gun” is just fine. Tell your child that you’ll demonstrate first, and they should watch and tell you if you’re getting close to something that it’s not okay to point your “muzzle” at. Point your “gun” around a bit, slowly, and let your child critique you. Most kids quite happily accept the chance to critique you – just wait till the teen years.

If your child stops you from pointing your “gun” at certain inanimate objects, that’s not a problem, even though it doesn’t quite match the training – it means they’re sensitive to where the muzzle is pointing. Ask them why you shouldn’t point your muzzle where they told you not to. Their favorite piece of technology, for example, might be a good test subject. Use this to spark discussion about safety topics in general – that things can be replaced, but people (and, if you prefer, pets or animals) can’t.

Part 3: Practice.

Now, it’s time to have your child take on the “gun” and keep it pointed in a safe direction. Before giving them the “gun”, establish a goal: “Now I’m going to give you the gun, and your goal is to walk into the other room, all the way to the other door, and then back to me without ever pointing the muzzle in an unsafe place.” Only after the goal is established should you hand over the “gun” – otherwise, there’s an awkward period of waiting for direction that can be ripe for distraction. Go with them, and stop them immediately if there’s a muzzle direction error – don’t wait to do a critique when the exercise is over.


Reprinted with permission from “Teacher Resources,” by Ty Marbut, originally published on gun Sense for Kids (gunsenseforkids.us/teacher-resources), December 7, 2024.