By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1State the rules for crossing a road safely
  • 2Explain what the traffic-light colours mean
  • 3Identify safe and unsafe behaviour near roads
  • 4Tell countable nouns from uncountable nouns
  • 5Write road-safety rules in their own words
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Why this chapter matters
Be Smart, Be Safe teaches essential road-safety rules through an informational chapter. Children learn how to cross roads safely, read traffic lights, and stay alert near traffic, while practising countable and uncountable nouns.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Be Smart, Be Safe — Class 4 English (CBSE)

From the current Class 4 English Santoor textbook, Unit 1: My Land, Chapter 3. Knowing road-safety rules keeps us and others safe every day.


1. Chapter at a glance

  • Text type: An informational (non-fiction) chapter on road safety.
  • Main idea: Following road rules and staying alert prevents accidents.
  • What to notice while reading: The simple rules for crossing roads and reading traffic lights.

2. Key road-safety rules

  • Look right, look left, look right again before crossing a road.
  • Cross only at the zebra crossing (pedestrian crossing).
  • Walk on the footpath, not on the road.
  • Obey the traffic lights:
    • Red — Stop.
    • Yellow — Wait, get ready.
    • Green — Go (when it is safe).
  • Never run across a road, and do not play on the road.
  • Hold an adult's hand while crossing.
  • Do not use headphones or a phone near traffic — they distract you.
  • On a two-wheeler, wear a helmet; in a car, wear a seat belt.

3. Summary

"Be Smart, Be Safe" teaches road safety. It reminds children to look both ways before crossing, to use zebra crossings and footpaths, and to obey traffic lights (red–stop, yellow–wait, green–go). It warns against running on roads, playing on roads, and getting distracted by headphones. Being careful keeps everyone safe.

4. Theme and values

  • Safety first — rules protect us from accidents.
  • Awareness — stay alert near traffic.
  • Responsibility — follow rules and help others stay safe too.

5. New words and meanings

WordMeaning
trafficvehicles moving on the road
zebra crossingblack-and-white stripes where people cross safely
footpaththe path at the side of a road for walking
signala light or sign that tells you what to do
accidentan unwanted, harmful event

6. Let Us Think (comprehension)

  1. What should you do before crossing a road? Look right, look left, and look right again, and cross only when it is safe.

  2. Where should you cross a busy road? At the zebra crossing.

  3. What do the red, yellow, and green lights mean? Red — stop; yellow — wait/get ready; green — go.

  4. Why should you not use headphones near traffic? Because they distract you and you may not hear vehicles.

  5. Write two more road-safety rules. Walk on the footpath; hold an adult's hand; do not play on the road; wear a helmet or seat belt.

7. Language and grammar practice

Countable and uncountable nouns

  • Countable nouns can be counted: one car, two buses, three signals.
  • Uncountable nouns cannot be counted one by one: traffic, water, safety, advice.

Sort these: car, traffic, helmet, water, signal.

  • Countable: car, helmet, signal.
  • Uncountable: traffic, water.

8. Writing and speaking practice

  • Writing: Make a list of five road-safety rules in your own words.
  • Speaking: Explain to a friend what the three traffic-light colours mean.

9. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Crossing the road anywhere. Fix: Cross only at the zebra crossing, after looking both ways.
  • Mistake: Thinking yellow means "go fast". Fix: Yellow means wait and get ready, not speed up.
  • Mistake: Counting uncountable nouns (two traffics). Fix: Say "a lot of traffic", not "two traffics".

10. Practice set

  1. What should you do before crossing a road?
  2. What does the red light mean? The green light?
  3. Where should you walk along a road?
  4. Why should you not use headphones near traffic?
  5. Sort into countable/uncountable: car, traffic, helmet, water.
  6. Write three road-safety rules.

11. Answer key

  1. Look right, left, and right again; cross only when safe.
  2. Red — stop; green — go (when safe).
  3. On the footpath.
  4. Because they distract you from the traffic around you.
  5. Countable: car, helmet; Uncountable: traffic, water.
  6. Any three rules, e.g., use the zebra crossing, hold an adult's hand, wear a helmet.

12. Fun activity

Road-Safety Poster

Make a poster with a traffic light. Next to each colour, write what to do. Add one safety slogan, such as "Stop, Look, and Cross!"

13. Quick revision

  • Unit 1: My Land · Chapter 3 · an informational chapter on road safety.
  • Look right–left–right; cross at the zebra crossing; walk on the footpath.
  • Traffic lights: red–stop, yellow–wait, green–go.
  • Stay alert: no running, no playing on roads, no headphones near traffic.
  • Grammar: countable vs uncountable nouns.

Unit 1: My Land

This chapter is part of Unit 1: My Land. The three chapters in this unit are:

  • Chapter 1: Together We Can — a poem about teamwork
  • Chapter 2: The Tinkling Bells — a story about honesty
  • Chapter 3: Be Smart, Be Safe — about road safety

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Text type
informational (non-fiction) chapter
Read it for facts and rules, not a story plot.
Main theme
road safety, awareness, and responsibility
Following rules and staying alert prevents accidents.
Answer habit
Use the rules from the chapter
Support answers with a specific rule, such as crossing at the zebra crossing.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Crossing the road anywhere
Cross only at the zebra crossing, after looking both ways.
WATCH OUT
Thinking yellow means go fast
Yellow means wait and get ready, not speed up.
WATCH OUT
Counting uncountable nouns, such as two traffics
Say 'a lot of traffic', not 'two traffics'.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Comprehension
What should you do before crossing a road?
Show solution
Look right, left, and right again, and cross only when it is safe.
Q2EASY· Comprehension
What does the red light mean, and the green light?
Show solution
Red means stop; green means go when it is safe.
Q3MEDIUM· Reason
Why should you not use headphones near traffic?
Show solution
Because they distract you and you may not hear vehicles coming.
Q4MEDIUM· Grammar
Sort into countable and uncountable: car, traffic, helmet, water.
Show solution
Countable: car, helmet; Uncountable: traffic, water.
Q5EASY· Recall
Where should you walk along a road?
Show solution
On the footpath.
Q6HARD· Writing
Write three road-safety rules in your own words.
Show solution
Examples: use the zebra crossing, hold an adult's hand, do not play on the road, and wear a helmet or seat belt.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Be Smart, Be Safe is Chapter 3 of Unit 1: My Land in the Class 4 Santoor textbook.
  • Text type: an informational chapter on road safety.
  • Look right-left-right; cross at the zebra crossing; walk on the footpath.
  • Traffic lights: red-stop, yellow-wait, green-go.
  • Stay alert: no running, no playing on roads, no headphones near traffic.
  • Grammar focus: countable vs uncountable nouns.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-5 marks in school tests, oral checks, notebooks, and activities

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Very Short12-3Road rules, traffic lights, or noun types
Short Answer21-2Reasoning about safety or countable/uncountable nouns
Activity / Project30-1Road-safety poster or writing rules
Prep strategy
  • Learn the steps to cross a road safely
  • Memorise the traffic-light colours
  • Practise sorting countable and uncountable nouns
  • Write road-safety rules in your own words

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Staying safe on roads

These rules protect children every day while walking and crossing.

Understanding signs and signals

Reading traffic lights and signs builds everyday awareness.

Using nouns correctly

Knowing countable and uncountable nouns improves speaking and writing.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Underline the command word: what, where, why, or sort
  2. Give a specific rule in each safety answer
  3. Match each traffic-light colour to its action
  4. Do not put a number before an uncountable noun

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Design three traffic signs and explain what each means.
  • List five uncountable nouns you see on a busy road.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 4 School AssessmentHigh
Class 4 Foundation / Olympiad PracticeMedium
Notebook and Activity EvaluationHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Use the zebra crossing, look right-left-right, hold an adult's hand, and cross only when the way is clear or the light is green.

Countable nouns can be counted (one car, two signals); uncountable nouns cannot be counted one by one (traffic, water, safety).
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 31 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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