Encouragement
Encouragement strategies are about having fun; they generate excitement and interest in walking and bicycling. Special events, mileage clubs, contests and ongoing activities all provide ways for parents and children to discover, or rediscover, that walking and bicycling are doable and a lot of fun.
Families walking to Saluda School in Saluda, North Carolina.
Encouragement is one of the complementary strategies that Safe Routes to School (SRTS) programs use to increase the number of children who walk and bicycle to school safely. In particular, encouragement and education strategies are closely intertwined, working together to promote walking and bicycling by rewarding participation and educating children and adults about safety and the benefits of bicycling and walking.
Encouragement activities also play an important role moving the overall SRTS program forward because they build interest and enthusiasm, which can buoy support for changes that might require more time and resources, such as constructing a new sidewalk.
In brief, encouragement activities:
- Can be quick and easy to start.
- Can be done with little funding.
- Can be organized by parents, students, teachers or community volunteers.
- Focus on fun and enjoyment.
- Jumpstart a community’s interest in walking and bicycling.
- Show quick success and generate enthusiasm for other strategies that may require a greater investment of time and resources.
- Can foster safe walking, bicycling and physical activity behaviors that will be useful throughout children’s lives.
- Offer teachable moments to reinforce safe walking and bicycling behaviors.
Walking to Putnam Heights Elementary School in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.
There are many encouragement strategies that will be described in this section, such as Walk to School Days, when the whole school is invited to take one day off from their usual routine to join in the parade of children walking and bicycling to school. Walking school buses and bicycle trains are organized efforts that group children with adults for safety and for fun, while contests help to encourage students to walk or bicycle by offering rewards and recognition.
The ideas described in this chapter are just a sample of what a community can create. Divided into three categories, each category in this chapter includes a description, a summary of how to conduct the activity and examples of how real-life communities are "putting it into practice."
