Privacy and closed doors.

As we grow up, some things become private. Knowing what private means, and that it is a good and normal thing, helps everyone.

Visual schedule

Privacy

  • I knock first
  • I wait for an answer
  • I get dressed in my room
  • I close the door for privacy
Make it yours

More ways to teach privacy

What to expect

Growing up means some things move from public to private: changing clothes, bathroom time, some kinds of touch. Literal thinkers do great with clear rules: which rooms are private, that we knock first, that private means the door is closed. This is about dignity, and it is a foundation for safety too. You know your kid.

One tip from a dad who's been there

Make it a rule, not a mood: we knock on closed doors every time, even family. Rules that never change are easier to trust than ones that depend on who is asking.

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.