Internet Safety
Online Safety, also known as E-Safety, is a vital part of education for your child. As uses of technology and the internet increase, keeping your child safe online is more important than ever.
E-Safety
Please remember that there are many ways we can support young children when using online resources. We want young children to use the internet in a well-supported and safe way.
They need to be SMART:
Safe: Don’t give your personal information out such as email, home address or school name.
Meet: Meeting someone in real life that you have only been in touch with online can be dangerous. Only do so with your parents’ or carers’ permission.
Accepting: Accepting emails, messages or opening files, images or texts from people you don’t know or trust can lead to problems.
Reliable: Someone online might lie about who they are. Information on the internet may not be true. Always check information by looking at other websites, in books, or ask someone who knows.
Tell: Tell a parent, carer or a trusted adult if someone, or something, makes you feel uncomfortable or worried, or if you or someone you know is being bullied online.
Livestreaming
Livestreaming is becoming a very popular way for people to broadcast themselves on apps such as Instagram Live, Facebook Live, Periscope, Twitch and YouTube Live. People use these services to broadcast themselves to others, such as their friends, a certain group of people or the general public. Vloggers and celebrities communicate with their fans and disseminate certain messages, including marketing and advertising through livestreaming. Livestreaming is also used as a means to communicate to the world what is happening at a specific moment in time. For example, livestreaming can be used to document breaking news stories. On many occasions this footage is used by some of the large media channels in order to document a breaking story. With all online content, it’s really important to consider what the live streaming content consists of. If your child is viewing a livestream, tell them to:
· Think before you watch-Remember that it is live and you can never be sure exactly what you might see or hear in the video.
· Use reporting tools- If you feel anything in the live stream is offensive, abusive or breaks the rules of the service you are watching it on then report it. You can report the video but you can also report individual comments.
· Make positive choices- If you comment on a livestream, think carefully about how that will affect the person/people in the video and might reflect on you.
· Tell someone- If you experience anything during a livestream that makes you worried, upset or uncomfortable, then always tells a trusted adult.
Here are some links which will give you and your child more information about how to enjoy the internet safely.
For pupils:
- KIDSMART (KS1)
- SAFER INTERNET (KS2 – KS4)
- DIGIZEN (KS2 – KS4)
- CHILDNET (KS1 – KS4)
- THINKUKNOW (CEOP Videos suitable for KS1 – KS4 and for parents)
For parents:
- NSPCC ONLINE SAFETY
- SAFER INTERNET (for Parents)
- SAFER INTERNET Parental Controls
- SAFER INTERNET – A Parent’s Guide to Technology
- HGfL E-Safety Guide For Parents
- CHILDNET’s Guide to Online Gaming
- https://youtu.be/Kr5c5Z1muQM - New link to a clip about Tik Tok from Northants online safety