Next Generation Learning – Stay safe – working with your local safeguarding children board Charlotte Aynsley & Anna Janes Presented at BETT 2009 on Thursday 15 January 2009
Dec 30, 2015
Next Generation Learning – Stay safe – working with your local safeguarding children board
Charlotte Aynsley & Anna Janes
Presented at BETT 2009 on Thursday 15 January 2009
Make the UK the safest place online02
Improve child safety and protection03
Consider e-safety as a child protection issue, not a technology issue04
Protect in school, educate for out of school01
Encourage mainstreaming of e-safety in wider safeguarding policies05
Becta’s principles
So…..How do our children and young people use technology….?
Meet…Jordan
This is how he uses technology
Communication
Entertainment
EducationPersonal Management
For young people, technology is a way of life
Young people: internet use rises at ages 10 and 13
1,400,000 UK pupils have their
own web page.
There are over 110 million active
users of MySpace
(as of January 2008)
If MySpace were a country, it would be the
11th largest in the world
(between Japan and Mexico)
So what are the risks?
The Byron Review categorised the risks into four main areas:
• Contact – risk of physical assault, sexual abuse etc
• Content – illegal or inappropriate content
• Conduct – antisocial or illegal behaviour
• Commerce – online gambling, financial scams
The Children’s Act 2004:Safeguard and promote the welfare of children
Every Child MattersStaying Safe
Working together to Safeguard ChildrenA guide to inter-agency working to safeguard and promote the welfare of children
Byron Review:Harmful or inappropriate “material” – CONTENT, CONTACT, CONDUCT
The remit for Local Safeguarding Children Boards (LSCBs)
Becta’s work to date with LSCBs…
Month Activity
October 07 Meeting with ADCS Chair of Information Systems and Technology Committee (Richard Stiff, North Lincolnshire)
November 07 CEOP and ADCS support for the safeguarding of children online and local authority support
December 07 ADCS support a national survey
February 08 Wrote to every local authority asking them to nominate a strategic e-safety lead, launch of the toolkit and a national conference
April 08 Sponsoring of ADCS presidency
June 08 LSCB e-safety development days
September 08 LSCB e-safety development days
November 08 Regional events
Next steps….?
How can LSCBs support you?
Anna Janes Brent LSCB e-safety sub-committee - chair
Stay Safe – Working with your Local Safeguarding Children Boards
Local Safeguarding Children Boards structure
Vision statement
“Swimming pools can be dangerous for children. To protect them, one can install locks, put up fences and deploy pool alarms. All of these measures are helpful, but by far the most important thing that one can do for one’s children is teach them to swim.”
Youth, Pornography and the InternetNational Research Council USA 2002
online citizenship = online safety
We teach our children to swim not just to prevent them from drowning but also for the pleasure they may get from it and the benefits it brings to their health.
Brent LSCB believes that we must teach children to ‘swim’ in the online world not only to ensure their safety but also to enable them to improve their emotional health and their enjoyment of the world.
We must therefore encourage children and young people to develop as responsible online citizens.
• What can schools do?
• Where do you fit in?
Contact…
Anna Janes
London Borough of Brent Chesterfield House9 Park LaneWembleyHA9 7RH
T +44 (0)20 8937 4735