About Us
Our Mission
The KidSafe mission is to teach personal safety to children and their grown-ups to build strong, resilient families and safer communities.
Our Vision
For all children and families to live in a society where children are protected from child sexual abuse and childhood trauma.
Our History
KidSafe has been educating children, families, and child-serving professionals since 2009. In ten years, we have taught over 60,000 children that they have the right to be safe and taught over 35,000 adults that they are the first line of defense for children.
Empower Me KidSafe! Programs

KidSafe for Kids
An 8-week curriculum designed for children in grades PreK4 – 2nd grade. Children learn important safety skills through fun not fear, using developmentally appropriate techniques such as role play, song, art, discussion and the foundation’s two award winning children’s books; “My Body is Special and Belongs to Me!” and “Jack Teaches his Friends to be KidSafe!” (books available in English, Spanish & Creole)

Parent Seminars
KidSafe for Parents provides a safe space to empower parents with knowledge and skills to prevent child sexual abuse. Child Sexual Abuse is scary - Teaching Your Children Personal Safety doesn't have to be. The focus of the seminar is integrating personal safety skills into everyday parenting. The goal is to raise independent, resilient children who know that they can come to their parent to talk about anything.

Educator Training
The KidSafe eLearn for Educators provides a strong foundation in sexual abuse prevention and response for all staff. The program covers: how to recognize children at risk for abuse, professional protocol, exact mandated reporting procedures and how to respond to disclosure. KidSafe educates on how to reinforce the use of KidSafe Prevention skills at school, and much more. This professional development seminar empowers educators with awareness and skills which can be integrated into their everyday classroom management to best keep children safe.
Why KidSafe?
Children who are sexually abused are at significantly greater risk for later posttraumatic stress and other anxiety symptoms depression and suicide attempts. These psychological problems can lead to significant disruptions in normal development and often have a lasting impact, leading to dysfunction and distress well into adulthood. Behavioral problems, including physical aggression, non-compliance, and oppositionality occur frequently among sexually abused children and adolescents. Child sexual abuse has been linked to higher levels of risk behaviors.