Help Kids to Wear Face Masks Safely
With back to school at our doorstep, and many communities mandating the wearing of face masks in enclosed spaces, like the classroom, helping kids to wear face masks safely needs to be a top priority.
The first sticking point for a lot of parents and educators is that some kids, particularly younger ones who don’t fully grasp what is going on in the world, will fight to wear a face mask. They may whine and be obstinate, in the hopes that they will be allowed to remove it. It takes time to get used to wearing them, but as kids in other countries have proven for years, it’s completely doable.
How to help kids accept wearing masks
While it can be logically explained to an older child that wearing a mask helps to prevent them, and those around them, from sharing the virus, younger kids might not be able to grasp the importance of consistently and safely wearing a mask. However, even with older kids, it’s important to use a positive message instead of scaring them.
The easiest way to get their buy-in is to make it a game for them. A challenge that they will be happy to attempt to win! Whether you incentivize the game with stickers and prizes or just encourage them through the thrill of winning, using a positive position, rather than a negative, more punitive stance, will go much further in getting the behavior you are looking for.
Here are a few other ideas to make masks a little more palatable:
- Let the kids pick out the fabric patterns that they like; or choose options that fit in with their interests. If they are all about video games or sports, there is a fabric mask out there for them.
- Add masks into play opportunities, like making them into superheroes—Timmy the Mighty Masked Hero—or playing at being a doctor are two ways to go about it.
- Most kids enjoy being given a ‘grown-up task’: they feel a lot of pride in being to help out in some way, so why not make your reluctant mask wearer the family mask monitor? They can be put in charge of making sure everyone has their masks on before leaving the house and everyone is washing their hands after taking the masks off!
- Make masks for your child’s favorite stuffed toy or doll, so that it’s “all in the family!” This helps to normalize the idea of mask-wearing for your child.
How to ensure kids are using face masks safely
Teaching anything to children requires a certain amount of repetition and consistency, but it also helps if you too are displaying the behavior you want to see them emulate.
- Get them used to wearing one for increasingly longer periods of time. Expecting a child to go from not wearing one at all to wearing one all day at school isn’t likely to be a positive experience. Work up in 10-15 minute increments to a full hour.
- Choose masks for your child that they can put on and take off themselves, as they will have to be able to do so at school. The ones that tie might be more comfortable for some, but if they can’t tie it properly or tightly enough, it will be good to get them used to other types.
- Clearly demonstrate how to put on and take off a mask and practice it a lot:
- To put it on, wash hands and, using the ear loops, cover the nose, mouth, and chin.
- To remove the mask, do the same thing in reverse order: remove the mask and sanitize or wash hands. If it meets your school’s rules, provide your child with a clean container to put the mask in when they have to take it off—to eat lunch, for example. You can practice with them at home, at the dinner table.
- Teach kids not to pull down their masks around their necks, or let them hang off their ears.
It’s important that kids learn not to fuss with the mask once it’s on, and that requires time to practice and get used to. By engaging in play or keeping their hands busy as they get used to wearing a face mask, it will become a matter of routine.
The OllieWorld, makers of the Ollie Swaddle & Dailies, has developed a program to give back to organizations that support foster babies and foster children named the Ollie Full Circle through ongoing donations of their award-winning swaddles. As part of this program, the company is now producing and donating face masks for children who need them made of the same moisture-wicking fabric as their swaddles. The Ollie masks are not available for sale and are solely made available via a donation to organizations serving foster and at-risk children. The Ollie Full Circle mission is to help protect children and babies who are most vulnerable. Visit https://