Educational posters teaching children about safer strangers and how to identify trusted adults.
Two educational posters about "Safer Strangers" and "Strangers," featuring cartoon illustrations of people in various roles such as police officers, firefighters, and doctors, with text explaining safety rules.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Who are Safer Strangers Sorting Activity (teacher made)
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Who are Safer Strangers Sorting Activity (teacher made)
Looking at the image, I can see this is a safety education activity for children about “Safer Strangers” — people in uniforms who can help if you’re lost or need help.
The left page shows two examples of safer strangers:
- A police officer (in black uniform with hat)
- A crossing guard (in yellow high-vis jacket holding a stop sign)
The middle page has the title “Strangers” and says: “People I don’t know. People I shouldn’t talk to.” It also shows two figures — one waving (maybe not safe to talk to), and one standing alone (also not safe).
The right page is a grid of 16 different people in various uniforms or roles — these are likely the “safer strangers” the child should learn to identify.
The task is probably to match or identify which of the people on the right page are “safer strangers” — meaning they wear uniforms and badges, and are trained to help children.
Let’s go through each person on the right page and decide if they are a “safer stranger”:
Top row (left to right):
1. Girl in pink dress — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
2. Boy in hat and backpack — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
3. Man in green shirt — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
4. Woman in white coat and pink skirt — looks like a nurse or doctor? But no badge visible — maybe not clearly a helper uniform → probably NOT
5. Woman in purple hat and coat — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
6. Woman in yellow high-vis jacket holding stop sign — YES! Crossing guard (same as left page) → SAFER STRANGER
7. Woman in blue uniform — could be a police officer or security? Looks official → possibly YES
Bottom row (left to right):
8. Man in blue uniform with cap — looks like a bus driver or transit worker → might be helpful, but not always considered “safer stranger” for kids → probably NOT
9. Woman in green scrubs — nurse or medical worker → YES, can help in emergencies → SAFER STRANGER
10. Man in black uniform with badge — looks like a police officer → YES → SAFER STRANGER
11. Man in white lab coat — doctor or scientist → can help, but not always accessible → maybe YES? But let’s stick to clear helpers → perhaps NOT for this level
12. Woman in orange shirt — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
13. Man in firefighter gear — YES! Firefighter → SAFER STRANGER
Wait — let me re-check based on typical “safer stranger” teaching for kids:
Common safer strangers include:
- Police officers
- Firefighters
- Crossing guards
- Teachers or school staff (if at school)
- Nurses or doctors (in hospitals or clinics)
- Security guards with badges
From the grid, the clearest “safer strangers” are:
- Crossing guard (yellow jacket, stop sign) — top row, 6th
- Nurse/medical worker (green scrubs) — bottom row, 2nd
- Police officer (black uniform, badge) — bottom row, 3rd
- Firefighter (helmet, gear) — bottom row, 6th
Also, the woman in blue uniform (top row, 7th) might be a police officer or security — if she has a badge, then yes. But from the image, it’s not super clear.
In many such worksheets, the expected answers are the ones with very obvious uniforms: police, fire, crossing guard, nurse.
So, likely 4 or 5 people are “safer strangers”.
But since the user didn’t specify what exactly to do (e.g., “circle the safer strangers” or “how many?”), and the options are false, I’ll assume the task is to identify them.
However, looking again — the left page already shows two examples: police officer and crossing guard.
The right page is probably meant for the child to find all similar people.
Given that, and to be precise, let’s list them clearly:
✔ Safer Strangers (uniformed helpers):
1. Crossing guard (yellow jacket, stop sign) — top row, position 6
2. Nurse (green scrubs) — bottom row, position 2
3. Police officer (black uniform, badge) — bottom row, position 3
4. Firefighter (helmet, gear) — bottom row, position 6
Possibly:
5. Woman in blue uniform (top row, position 7) — if she’s a police officer or security, but less clear.
For a child’s worksheet, they’d likely expect 4 clear ones.
But wait — the middle page says “People I don’t know. People I shouldn’t talk to.” and shows two people — so the contrast is between “strangers you shouldn’t talk to” vs “safer strangers you CAN talk to if lost”.
So the answer should be the people on the right page who are “safer strangers”.
Since the user didn’t ask a specific question, but the context is solving the problem in the image, and the image is about identifying safer strangers, I think the intended task is to recognize which figures are safer strangers.
But since I must provide a final answer, and there’s no explicit question, perhaps the worksheet expects the child to circle or select them.
Alternatively, maybe the task is to match the two on the left to their counterparts on the right.
Left page has:
- Police officer (black uniform) → matches bottom row, 3rd person
- Crossing guard (yellow jacket) → matches top row, 6th person
So if the task is to match, then those two.
But the right page has more.
Given the ambiguity, and since the user said “solve the problem”, and the image is educational material, I’ll assume the core task is to identify the safer strangers from the grid.
To be safe, I’ll go with the most obvious ones that match the examples on the left.
Final decision: The safer strangers in the grid are:
- The crossing guard (top row, 6th)
- The police officer (bottom row, 3rd)
And possibly others, but for a basic level, these two are direct matches.
But the worksheet likely wants all that apply.
Let me count again carefully:
From standard “safer stranger” lists for kids:
- Police officer
- Firefighter
- Crossing guard
- Nurse/doctor
- Teacher (but not shown)
- Security guard with badge
In the grid:
- Top row, 6: crossing guard — YES
- Bottom row, 2: nurse — YES
- Bottom row, 3: police officer — YES
- Bottom row, 6: firefighter — YES
That’s 4.
Top row, 7: woman in blue — could be a police officer, but she’s not wearing a hat or badge visibly — probably not counted.
So 4 safer strangers.
But the left page only shows 2, so maybe the task is to find those two on the right.
I think I need to make a judgment call.
Perhaps the problem is to identify which of the people on the right are “safer strangers” based on the definition given.
Definition from left page: “They wear a uniform and a name badge. They help people. I can talk to them, if I am lost or need help.”
So criteria:
1. Wear a uniform
2. Have a name badge (or identifiable role)
3. Help people
4. Safe to talk to if lost
Applying:
1. Girl in pink dress — no uniform — NO
2. Boy in hat — no uniform — NO
3. Man in green shirt — no uniform — NO
4. Woman in white coat — might be doctor, but no badge visible, and not always accessible — probably NO for kids
5. Woman in purple — no uniform — NO
6. Woman in yellow jacket with stop sign — uniform, helps, safe — YES
7. Woman in blue uniform — looks official, might have badge — possibly YES, but let’s say NO for now to be conservative
Bottom row:
8. Man in blue uniform — bus driver? Not typically “safer stranger” for kids — NO
9. Woman in green scrubs — nurse, uniform, helps — YES
10. Man in black uniform with badge — police, uniform, badge, helps — YES
11. Man in white coat — doctor, but not always accessible — NO for this context
12. Woman in orange — no uniform — NO
13. Man in firefighter gear — uniform, helps, safe — YES
So 4: positions 6, 9, 10, 13 in the grid (counting left to right, top to bottom).
Positions:
- Top row: 6th is crossing guard
- Bottom row: 2nd is nurse, 3rd is police, 6th is firefighter
Yes.
So the answer is those four.
But since the user might expect a number or a list, and the format requires a final answer, I’ll state the count.
Alternatively, perhaps the task is to select them, but since it's text, I'll provide the count.
I think for the purpose of this, the final answer is that there are 4 safer strangers in the grid.
But let's double-check the image description.
Upon second thought, in many such worksheets, the "safer strangers" are specifically the ones with clear public service uniforms: police, fire, crossing guard, and sometimes nurse.
And in this case, all four are present.
So I'll go with 4.
Final Answer: 4
The left page shows two examples of safer strangers:
- A police officer (in black uniform with hat)
- A crossing guard (in yellow high-vis jacket holding a stop sign)
The middle page has the title “Strangers” and says: “People I don’t know. People I shouldn’t talk to.” It also shows two figures — one waving (maybe not safe to talk to), and one standing alone (also not safe).
The right page is a grid of 16 different people in various uniforms or roles — these are likely the “safer strangers” the child should learn to identify.
The task is probably to match or identify which of the people on the right page are “safer strangers” — meaning they wear uniforms and badges, and are trained to help children.
Let’s go through each person on the right page and decide if they are a “safer stranger”:
Top row (left to right):
1. Girl in pink dress — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
2. Boy in hat and backpack — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
3. Man in green shirt — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
4. Woman in white coat and pink skirt — looks like a nurse or doctor? But no badge visible — maybe not clearly a helper uniform → probably NOT
5. Woman in purple hat and coat — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
6. Woman in yellow high-vis jacket holding stop sign — YES! Crossing guard (same as left page) → SAFER STRANGER
7. Woman in blue uniform — could be a police officer or security? Looks official → possibly YES
Bottom row (left to right):
8. Man in blue uniform with cap — looks like a bus driver or transit worker → might be helpful, but not always considered “safer stranger” for kids → probably NOT
9. Woman in green scrubs — nurse or medical worker → YES, can help in emergencies → SAFER STRANGER
10. Man in black uniform with badge — looks like a police officer → YES → SAFER STRANGER
11. Man in white lab coat — doctor or scientist → can help, but not always accessible → maybe YES? But let’s stick to clear helpers → perhaps NOT for this level
12. Woman in orange shirt — no uniform → NOT safer stranger
13. Man in firefighter gear — YES! Firefighter → SAFER STRANGER
Wait — let me re-check based on typical “safer stranger” teaching for kids:
Common safer strangers include:
- Police officers
- Firefighters
- Crossing guards
- Teachers or school staff (if at school)
- Nurses or doctors (in hospitals or clinics)
- Security guards with badges
From the grid, the clearest “safer strangers” are:
- Crossing guard (yellow jacket, stop sign) — top row, 6th
- Nurse/medical worker (green scrubs) — bottom row, 2nd
- Police officer (black uniform, badge) — bottom row, 3rd
- Firefighter (helmet, gear) — bottom row, 6th
Also, the woman in blue uniform (top row, 7th) might be a police officer or security — if she has a badge, then yes. But from the image, it’s not super clear.
In many such worksheets, the expected answers are the ones with very obvious uniforms: police, fire, crossing guard, nurse.
So, likely 4 or 5 people are “safer strangers”.
But since the user didn’t specify what exactly to do (e.g., “circle the safer strangers” or “how many?”), and the options are false, I’ll assume the task is to identify them.
However, looking again — the left page already shows two examples: police officer and crossing guard.
The right page is probably meant for the child to find all similar people.
Given that, and to be precise, let’s list them clearly:
✔ Safer Strangers (uniformed helpers):
1. Crossing guard (yellow jacket, stop sign) — top row, position 6
2. Nurse (green scrubs) — bottom row, position 2
3. Police officer (black uniform, badge) — bottom row, position 3
4. Firefighter (helmet, gear) — bottom row, position 6
Possibly:
5. Woman in blue uniform (top row, position 7) — if she’s a police officer or security, but less clear.
For a child’s worksheet, they’d likely expect 4 clear ones.
But wait — the middle page says “People I don’t know. People I shouldn’t talk to.” and shows two people — so the contrast is between “strangers you shouldn’t talk to” vs “safer strangers you CAN talk to if lost”.
So the answer should be the people on the right page who are “safer strangers”.
Since the user didn’t ask a specific question, but the context is solving the problem in the image, and the image is about identifying safer strangers, I think the intended task is to recognize which figures are safer strangers.
But since I must provide a final answer, and there’s no explicit question, perhaps the worksheet expects the child to circle or select them.
Alternatively, maybe the task is to match the two on the left to their counterparts on the right.
Left page has:
- Police officer (black uniform) → matches bottom row, 3rd person
- Crossing guard (yellow jacket) → matches top row, 6th person
So if the task is to match, then those two.
But the right page has more.
Given the ambiguity, and since the user said “solve the problem”, and the image is educational material, I’ll assume the core task is to identify the safer strangers from the grid.
To be safe, I’ll go with the most obvious ones that match the examples on the left.
Final decision: The safer strangers in the grid are:
- The crossing guard (top row, 6th)
- The police officer (bottom row, 3rd)
And possibly others, but for a basic level, these two are direct matches.
But the worksheet likely wants all that apply.
Let me count again carefully:
From standard “safer stranger” lists for kids:
- Police officer
- Firefighter
- Crossing guard
- Nurse/doctor
- Teacher (but not shown)
- Security guard with badge
In the grid:
- Top row, 6: crossing guard — YES
- Bottom row, 2: nurse — YES
- Bottom row, 3: police officer — YES
- Bottom row, 6: firefighter — YES
That’s 4.
Top row, 7: woman in blue — could be a police officer, but she’s not wearing a hat or badge visibly — probably not counted.
So 4 safer strangers.
But the left page only shows 2, so maybe the task is to find those two on the right.
I think I need to make a judgment call.
Perhaps the problem is to identify which of the people on the right are “safer strangers” based on the definition given.
Definition from left page: “They wear a uniform and a name badge. They help people. I can talk to them, if I am lost or need help.”
So criteria:
1. Wear a uniform
2. Have a name badge (or identifiable role)
3. Help people
4. Safe to talk to if lost
Applying:
1. Girl in pink dress — no uniform — NO
2. Boy in hat — no uniform — NO
3. Man in green shirt — no uniform — NO
4. Woman in white coat — might be doctor, but no badge visible, and not always accessible — probably NO for kids
5. Woman in purple — no uniform — NO
6. Woman in yellow jacket with stop sign — uniform, helps, safe — YES
7. Woman in blue uniform — looks official, might have badge — possibly YES, but let’s say NO for now to be conservative
Bottom row:
8. Man in blue uniform — bus driver? Not typically “safer stranger” for kids — NO
9. Woman in green scrubs — nurse, uniform, helps — YES
10. Man in black uniform with badge — police, uniform, badge, helps — YES
11. Man in white coat — doctor, but not always accessible — NO for this context
12. Woman in orange — no uniform — NO
13. Man in firefighter gear — uniform, helps, safe — YES
So 4: positions 6, 9, 10, 13 in the grid (counting left to right, top to bottom).
Positions:
- Top row: 6th is crossing guard
- Bottom row: 2nd is nurse, 3rd is police, 6th is firefighter
Yes.
So the answer is those four.
But since the user might expect a number or a list, and the format requires a final answer, I’ll state the count.
Alternatively, perhaps the task is to select them, but since it's text, I'll provide the count.
I think for the purpose of this, the final answer is that there are 4 safer strangers in the grid.
But let's double-check the image description.
Upon second thought, in many such worksheets, the "safer strangers" are specifically the ones with clear public service uniforms: police, fire, crossing guard, and sometimes nurse.
And in this case, all four are present.
So I'll go with 4.
Final Answer: 4
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of stranger danger worksheet.