Teaching Kids to Recognize Grooming

When thinking about perpetrators of child sexual abuse, many people picture an image of a creepy stranger. Parents and schools generally do a pretty good job of teaching their kids about “stranger danger.” But this is not where most of the danger lies. The vast majority of sexual abusers are known to the children they target, so it is incumbent upon us to teach kids not only how to respond when an uncomfortable or dangerous situation arises, but also how to recognize when danger is approaching.

In a previous post in this series about sexual abuse prevention, I wrote about how Using Data to Teach About Sexual Abuse Prevention can help kids understand that most sexual abusers are people that the kids already know. In Teaching Kids How to Tell About Sexual Abuse I shared some scenarios that you can use to help kids gain awareness about “tricks” and that they need to tell a trusted adult about confusing situations, even if nothing bad has happened yet. This post will cover how to teach kids how to recognize grooming, the subtle, gradual, and escalating process that sexual abusers use to build “trust” with kids, and often also with their caretakers. (I always use written or gestured quotations around the word “trust” in this context to help kids understand the difference between real trust and fake trust.)

We want our kids to be aware that they need to be careful with everyone, even people that they care about, but don’t want them to be so unduly frightened or anxious about the possibility of being hurt that they avoid developing trusting relationships with safe adults. It’s a fine line, and one that makes teaching about grooming a somewhat daunting task. And there aren’t a lot of easily accessible resources out there to help us how to do so! For me, figuring out the best way to teach about this has been an evolving process, and I’m sure I’ll continue to improve and expand upon my lessons (and I’ll keep sharing when I do), but here are some strategies and information that I currently use to teach kids about sexual abuse grooming. I use these lessons in the classrooms and also, when appropriate, with individual students.

Two fifth graders made this poster about grooming “tricks” at the conclusion of our personal safety unit.

Define Grooming. I explain that often when people are talking about grooming they mean “cleaning up,” like combing your hair, washing your face, or making sure that your clothing is on correctly.  We talk about how grooming also means “getting ready” – you would get ready for having your school picture taken by making sure that your hair, face, and clothes were all set. In the same way, sexual abusers groom kids they want to abuse by getting them ready to abuse.

Groomers Choose Their Targets Carefully. Groomers don’t want to caught, so they target kids who they think won’t tell or say no. They try to pick kids that they will someday get a chance to spend time alone with.

Grooming Takes Time. Abusers do not just walk up to kids and say, “I want to touch your private parts” because they know the kid will probably say “No!” They want to abuse kids, but they don’t want to scare the kid away too soon, and they don’t want to get caught, so they build invisible “traps,” kind of like spider webs, in the hope that the kid won’t notice until they’ve already been caught. Lots of kids have good background knowledge of prey animals from watching animal shows on TV. I often ask if they can think of an animal who sets up traps. This help them make connections that help build their understanding about grooming.

Groomers Use Tricks. Grooming is a subtle (hard to notice), gradual (slow), and escalating (more and worse over time) process of building “trust” with a kid and often the kid’s parent or other caretaker. (I always use written and gestured quotation marks around the word “trust” in this context, to highlight that it’s not real trust.) Grooming tricks include:

  • Fake Trustworthiness – pretending to be the kid’s friend in order to gain their trust
  • Testing Boundaries – jokes, roughhousing, back rubs, tickling, or sexualized games (pants-ing, truth or dare, strip games, etc.)
  • Touch – from regular, mostly comfortable non-sexual touch to “accidental” touch of private parts, often over time
  • Intimidation – using fear, embarrassment, or guilt to keep a kid from telling
  • Sharing sexual material – capitalizing on a kid’s natural curiosity to normalize sexual behavior by showing pictures, videos, text messages, photos, websites, notes, etc. of a sexual nature
  • Breaking Rules – encouraging a kid to break rules, which establishes secret-keeping as part of the relationship and can be used as blackmail in the future
  • Drugs and Alcohol – breaking the rules (see above) and/or making kids less able to stop the abuse because they’re under the influence of the substance
  • Communicating Secretly – texting, emailing, or calling in an unexpected way (parents don’t know about it, it happens a lot, the kid is told to keep it a secret)
  • Blaming and Confusing – making the kid feel responsible for the abuse or what could happen to the kid, his/her family, or the abuser if the kid tells

For all of these tricks I give examples of what an abuser might say or do at different stages in the grooming process, pointing out how it might be hard to recognize at first, the gradual pace, and how it escalates over time.

Although I try to build in the concepts of “tricking,” secrets, and using sexual material to harness kids’ natural curiosity at all grade levels, I specifically taught the above material with this exact language to fifth graders last year. It went so well that I am going to use it with fourth graders this year, although I may adapt it a bit. I will update you about how it goes.

A pair of fifth graders chose to include information about grooming and data about sexual abusers in this poster they made at the conclusion of our personal safety unit.

A great resource for teaching kids of all ages about grooming is Mia’s Secret by Peter Ledwon and Marilyn Mets. Mia is a young girl who is groomed by her mom’s friend, who plays with her and gives her a board game as a gift. (if you look carefully at the illustration you will see the game is called “Snake Pit.”) After a while he asks her to play another kind of game with him – the abuse – and then during subsequent events when she tries to resist, he uses the groomer’s tricks of cajoling by saying things like “But I played your game . . . I thought we were friends,” making her promise to keep the game a secret, and finally threatening her. The abuse stops when Mia figures out that she can get around her promise not to tell by telling her stuffed bear, Tikki, who then “tells” her mom.

Mia’s Secret is a wonderful, must-have book. It covers the importance of telling when there are secrets about touching or you are hurt, how to tell even if you can’t find the words or have promised not to, and is the best picture book I have ever seen that addresses grooming so clearly and so well. It is truly a book you can read with kids every year, because the content is deep and rich, and they will discover something new each time. I use it in third grade to very directly discuss grooming, and it’s a great review for them about secrets and how to tell.

Whenever I’m teaching about sexual abuse I give a heads-up in advance to the class and often also to individual kids who have previously talked to me about having been abused. At the beginning of each lesson I tell kids that they can talk to me any time privately about any of this information. Almost always, a child wants to talk to me after class or later in the day. Sometimes they are disclosing abuse for the first time, but more often they want to talk about a past abuse again, or tell me about a connection that they made between their experience and the lesson. (I later report and/or talk to a parent/guardian as appropriate to that particular situation.)

After teaching lessons on grooming, I have had kids tell me things like, “That is exactly how it happened!” or “He said _________ and gave me __________.” They always say this with strong voices with a tone that indicates they are outraged by the injustice. Their feelings of empowerment seem to outweigh their feelings of shame and powerlessness. So here’s another important reason to teach about grooming: Not only can it help prevent or stop sexual abuse, it can also help kids who have been sexually abused feel less responsible for what happened to them!

For more information about grooming (also good to share with parents) check out  Child Sexual Abuse: 6 Stages of Grooming by Dr. Michael Weiner.

More in this series about sexual abuse prevention coming soon. I hope you’ll let me know what you do to help kids learn about sexual abuse prevention and grooming.

You might also be interested in . . .

A Collection of Resources for Sexual Abuse Prevention

Coloring Book Helps Kids Learn About Sexual Abuse Prevention

Using Data to Teach About Sexual Abuse Prevention

Teaching Kids How to Tell About Sexual Abuse

I’ve Got a Secret . . .

Shrinking the Hurt

4 Comments

  1. You don’t know how appreciative I am that you are sharing this information! My personal safety lessons are going to have a richer purpose this year with your suggestions. I anxiously look forward to your next installment in this series!!!! :)

    Reply
  2. Thank you so much for sharing! Your contribution makes a safer world for kids…..

    Reply
  3. Thank you for sharing this fantastic information. I was groomed at the aged of 14 and I couldn’t break out of until my early twenties.

    Reply
  4. This is a great resource. I am a child sexual abuse grooming expert, however I do not teach children, I train mandated reporters, priests and parents, and specialize in talking about child sexual abuse grooming in the church or faith denominations. I would love for you to sign my petition, Make Child Sexual Abuse Grooming A Felony. http://ressurrection.wordpress.com/2013/01/02/overcoming-incest-and-the-effects-of-child-sexual-abuse-grooming/ There are links within this blog too.

    Thanks for all that you are doing.

    Sincerely,

    Ressurrection

    Reply

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