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JOURNI - Free Road Safety Programme

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Free, flexible, and curriculum-aligned, Journi empowers you to deliver important road safety messages in a way that works for you. No extra prep, no added cost, just meaningful learning that is lots of fun and engaging, helping our kids to become safer road users.

Journi is an interactive road safety education program developed for Years 5 & 6, however, appealing to all ages. An initiative of the Queensland Government,

developed and funded by the Department of Transport and Main Roads and supported for use in classrooms by the Department of Education. 

Getting started is easy. Sign up as a parent and receive a code that you and your children use to access the online components. No third-party data is collected, so your child’s privacy is safe. Get started now at www.journi.au or phone 1300 723 843 to get an overview.

In a nutshell, Journi is:

  • FREE to implement – no cost, no hassle

  • Free, flexible for all ages – modules can be adapted for different students.

  • Comic book-style, gamified learning – engaging and interactive.

  • Curriculum-aligned – meets Year 5 & 6 modules OR targets specific road safety behaviors.

  • Teacher-led or independent – mix and match delivery to suit your needs.

  • Four ready-to-go modules – online and offline activities integrate literacy,

  • numeracy, health, wellbeing, tech, and design.

  • Full online educator resources pack – live links for deeper discussion and curriculum alignment.

Developed in collaboration with educators, Journi is adaptable to suit different

dynamics, ability levels, and a range of devices, with both teacher-led and

student-led options available.

Easy to implement

Each of the four digital learning modules comes ready to roll with a full suite of lesson

plans, teacher resources & student worksheets - making it easy to integrate into any

program of study

Journi already has more than 6,500 students completing the program.


Feedback is welcome and encouraged.


Source *land transport accidents were the most common cause of death among males and females aged

 
 
 

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