911 is for real emergencies: a fire, someone badly hurt, or someone who cannot wake up. The key is teaching the difference between an emergency and a not-emergency, and the exact words: my name, where I am, and what is wrong. Stay on the line. Practice on an unplugged or toy phone so the steps are known, and be clear that pretend calls are not okay. You know your kid.
One tip from a dad who's been there
Post your home address in big print by the phone or the door, since a scared kid may blank on it. Role-play a few emergency and not-emergency examples so the sorting is practiced, not guessed.
Common questions
What if my child won't look at the schedule or story?
That is common at first. Leave it where the moment happens, point to one picture at a time, and keep it low-pressure. Many kids warm up to it after a few calm tries, in their own time.
Can I make this in Spanish?
Yes. Every tool and this page exist in Spanish, and the printed page comes out in the language you choose. Use the language switch at the top.
Do I need an account?
No. There is no signup and nothing you type is stored. Make it, print it, done.