American Knife and Tool Institute

Keeping Knives in American Lives Since 1998

  • 
  • Contribute Today
  • Login

Keeping Knives in American Lives Since 1998

  • Home
  • About
    • Board of Regents
    • Advisory Members
    • Premier Members
    • FAQs
    • History
  • Membership
    • Knife Industry AKTI Memberships
    • Individual AKTI Memberships
    • Be a Grassroots Supporter!
  • Legislation
    • Follow Current Knife Legislation
    • Finding Knife Laws
    • Contacting Legislators
    • Success Stories
    • How a Bill Becomes Law
  • Education
    • For Law Enforcement
    • For Legislators
    • Kids and Knives
    • The Ivory Ban
    • Brand Protection
  • News
    • Action Alerts
    • Free to Carry
    • Upcoming Events
    • Industry News
    • For Media
  • Resources
    • Career Center
    • Encounters With Law Enforcement
    • Counterfeit Knives
    • Traveling With a Knife
    • Knife Standards
    • Brochures & Handouts
    • Knives Save Lives!
    • Buy an AKTI Luggage Tag
  • State Knife Laws
    • State Auto-Open Laws
    • Federal Switchblade Act
    • About Statewide Knife Preemption
    • Court Case Summaries
    • Encounters With Law Enforcement
    • The Legal Edge
  • Contact Us
    • Refund Policy
    • Terms of Service

Teach Children Knife Safety

From the Fall 2006 AKTI newsletter

Sharpen Knife Blade Away From You
When sharpening or cutting, always push the knife blade away from you or other people. Several types of sharpeners are now offered for serrated and non-serrated blades. Photo credit: David Kowalski

From our earliest days of learning to eat by ourselves, we use utensils. Children begin the process by using their fingers. Then they graduate to spoons, forks and, finally, they are allowed to cut their own food with a knife.

Teaching proper knife use means teaching knife safety at the same time. This responsibility begins with parents and guardians and it doesn’t end with one casual lesson. Learning requires the three Rs … repetition, reinforcement and role models. And when it comes to knives, let’s wrap those three in another R … respect.

Safe knife use begins with the clear message that knives are tools, not toys. A great place to teach knife safety is in the kitchen. Allow your children to help with meal preparation. Teach them to use cutting boards so blades are not chipped or bent and counter tops are not damaged. They will learn that French chef knives, steak knives, paring knives and bread knives work best when used for their special tasks.

If your first lessons are in the workshop, you can teach your child about using knives to strip electrical wire or clean spark plugs.

Likewise, if your family hikes, bikes, canoes, camps or fishes, children can be taught about multi-tools, fillet knives, hunting knives and small folding knives for repairs, cutting rope and whittling.

Knife sharpening and knife care have basic rules. Teach them, reinforce them when necessary and follow your own rules. When your actions match your words, you have the most powerful teaching tool of all, the power of the positive role model.

Finally, respect zero-tolerance policies established by local schools. If your children attend public or private schools, assume the school has a zero-tolerance policy about carrying knives on school grounds, to school events or inside school buildings. Do not assume teachers or principals verbalize this rule. You do not want your child to be a local test case so you should clearly explain the rule to them and expect them to follow it.

Download this information as AKTI Teach Children Knife Safety – a printable handout (PDF) from AKTI

As a nonprofit association, AKTI’s role is to be the reasonable and responsible advocate for the knife-making and knife-using community; educating, promoting and informing that knives are important tools.

Copyright © American Knife and Tool Institute, all rights reserved
22 Vista View Ln
Cody, WY 82414
307-587-8296
Privacy & Security

  • Home
  • About
  • Membership
  • Legislation
  • Education
  • Brand Protection
  • Contribute Today
  • News
  • Resources
  • State Knife Laws
  • Contact

Members Login

Lost password?