There are five clear strands in our approach to developing e-safe Northumberland schools:
The first strand is to ensure that through training, pupils and adults have a clear understanding of the dangers and risks of use of technologies and also an understanding of what safe behaviour and practice is.
Secondly, schools need to have up to date policies and procedures which are shared with all users and regularly updated and reviewed by staff, pupils, parents and governors.
To support schools the Local Authority has provided network control and monitoring
tools through Policy Central Enterprise which enables schools to limit access to inappropriate material and monitor activity on their networks.
Schools
cannot guarantee that there will never be an e-safety incident and so our fourth strand is how to deal with a concern should one arise, what to do or not to do and who to contact.
By implementing the first four elements, schools will be able to gain accreditation for both themselves and their pupils.
Overall we aim to provide an integrated approach with materials for training of different groups, monitoring access and also providing a system of accreditation for schools that have demonstrated systematic application of the resources.
Read the introduction to the e-safety pack below
Why is e-safety important?
Increasingly pupils live and operate in a digital world. This world has steadily integrated with the classroom and, where activities involving the internet and communications technologies might have been a rarity a few years ago, they are now common place. Coupled with this pupils have access to these technologies outside of school and potentially through a range of locations, home, libraries, free wifi sites and also through a variety of technologies ranging from mobile phones to portable games machines.
This regular use of technology within teaching and learning and outside of school, places risks on pupils, staff, governors, parents and the community. The risks for users are wide ranging - not just dangers of viewing inappropriate content such pornography, but racist, suicide and eating disorder sites, dangers from cyberbullying and contact from paedophiles.
The use of technology also brings many learning benefits and so risks need to be balance up with the opportunities technology offers and moderated by the careful and rigorous application of e-safety measures by schools. All users be they children or adults need a clear understanding of what the risks and dangers are and how these can be safely managed.
Becta in ‘Safeguarding Children in a Digital World' comment:
‘While it is clear that technology offers children unprecedented opportunities to learn, communicate, create, discover and be entertained in a virtual environment, there are some inherent risks. And whilst most children’s confidence and competence in using the technologies is high, their knowledge and understanding of the risks may be low.’
It is this challenge we need to tackle in schools. To ensure that pupils are not just safe in school but are prepared for the outside world and the use of these technologies in the home and community.
Similarly Tanya Byron sees schools as an important source of information for parents and comments:
‘Other risks are some times exacerbated because of the lack of experience and confidence parents have with using new technology and leaving them feeling unable to deal with any problems.’
All schools will have clear and effective procedures for promoting e-safety and raising awareness. They should already have a number of documents and procedures for tackling and promoting e-safety with pupils and staff. This document aims to draw together local and national resources, along with information on technical infrastructure provided through the Local Authority, into an integrated and accredited approach to e-safety.
Within the pack are a range of resources which together will enable schools to provide an accredited approach to tackling e-safety with pupils, staff, governors and the community.
Government has increasingly focused on tackling issues of online safety and a number of different organisations from Child Exploitation and Online Protection agency to the Northumberland Safeguarding Children’s Board are now involved. Ofsted similarly are scrutinising procedures for safeguarding with increased rigour.
In her groundbreaking report, ‘Safer Children in a Digital World’, Tanya Byron set out a number of recommendations that will establish a new culture of responsibility, where government, industry, parents and all those who work with children, can work together with the shared purpose of a safer online world. These include:
It is against this backdrop that the L.A. and Northumberland Safeguarding Children Board are working together with other agencies to develop a range of policies and resources.