Online Safety Newsletter – February 2024

Online Safety Newsletter from Knowsley Council.

Online Safety Newsletter February 2024

We have become significantly dependent on and accustomed to the digital services and devices we use for being online. Online safety plays a vital role in the proper use of these tools.

Online Threats

The internet, for all its glory and opportunities, does unfortunately feature threats and challenges. These might manifest as online abuse, bullying, threats, impersonation, grooming, harassment or exposure to offensive and/or violent content.

All of these are harms we have a duty to protect young people from – and we shouldn’t underestimate its seriousness. If young people are exposed to – or perpetrate – these behaviours, they can be life-altering.

  • A systematic, large-scale review of academic research found that victims of cyberbullying are more than twice as likely to self-harm or attempt suicide
  • There have been high-profile news stories about online grooming and its devastating effects
  • According to Ofcom, 45% of 12-15s who go online say they have seen something hateful about a group of people online in the last 12 months

Practice Online Safety

Being aware of and practicing online safety is the only way to mitigate these risks. They will always be present, but teaching young people how to manage harmful situations and content will ensure they are best-placed to benefit from their time online, free from harm.

Creating an online space that is led by the principles of online safety requires all of us to step up – to both practice online safety and to challenge bad and harmful behaviours online.

Understanding the consequences of our actions as well as the tools that are available for reporting and helping are the first stepping stones in being an educated and respectful digital citizen.

This Newsletter provides practical advice for parents!

 

Inclusion: A tale of five rooms!

This month we have an article in the magazine ‘Headteacher Update’ that tells the story of how Sir Alexander Fleming won the NASEN Award for Primary Provision of the Year 2023 and how at the heart of this success is the nurturing and inclusive provision we provide to meet the diverse needs of our learners.

Click here to read the full article and search for page 30!

Headteachers update Jan 2024 page 30

Online Safety Newsletter – January 2024

January 2024 <– Click here to access the Online Safety Newsletter for January 2024.

Dear all, Please find our Online Safety Newsletter for January 2024 attached. I’m sure you will find it an interesting read!

Our rainbow room

Primary schools are busy places. Each morning is a hum drum of activity with teachers and support staff arriving and preparing lessons for the day ahead however at our school, our designated team of safeguarding leads is also opening the doors to our Rainbow Room with the aim to support our children, their families, and the wider community.

 

You may think our Rainbow Room is just that, a brightly designed room providing a safe space but our service is much more than what takes place within those four walls. Our Rainbow Room provision starts before the school day even begins!

Support before school

Many children at our school have siblings who attend another school, whose parents may have work commitments or who just need that little extra support. We have children who want to walk to school with their friends, safely. A popular solution, even in the rain… the walking bus!

 

This has proved to be a great way to support families who live close by but when we started renting a minibus, an idea initially born to drive our children to sports competitions, we soon realised such an asset could provide so much more, especially to families that aren’t local – picking children up so they too can arrive in time for their lessons!

 

We will do our utmost to ensure our children get to school and when they, and any parents or carers who may be with them arrive, they will always be greeted at 8.30am when the school doors open. Come rain or shine, the children will always start the school day greeted by a friendly familiar face.

 

Support in school

Our actual Rainbow Room is in a central location that both children and staff can easily visit during the school day. We have a Rainbow Room card system which provides children that may need a few moments out of a busy, stimulating classroom – children who are facing challenges at home, those who are new to our school, those with SEND or sometimes children that just want to see a friendly face, space where they can take time to reflect. The room has proved so successful that whilst some children visit the room for a minute or two, others would stay all day if they could to the point we’ve even had to introduce a visual timer!

Support outside of school

Our school is situated in one of the cheapest rental property areas in the UK. Consequently, many families have moved here, many of which have English as an additional language. Our Rainbow Room team help families secure school and nursery places for their children, and we contact charities and other external agencies that offer housing and food crisis support. We will also signpost families to furniture banks as well as community and family centres and we’ll support families with school admissions both for our school and when children make their next steps to secondary schools.

 

Also, on a Monday and Wednesday our Assistant Head Teacher collects surplus food from our local Aldi and displays this at the front of the school. This gives families the opportunity to take what they need and unsurprisingly, the box always empties.

 

Support from afar

Our safeguarding leads have weekly meetings with SLT, SEND and attendance teams so that we can identify children and families that need additional support. Our comprehensive safeguarding computer system, that is used and recognised by many schools through the United Kingdom, allows us to send and receive documents securely, meaning we can prepare to support children and their families before they even step through our door, whatever part of the UK they came from.

 

A ’typical day’ for our inclusion staff starts with logging onto systems, checking emails and calendars but from there on in, no one day is ever the same. You never know the challenges that families are facing and who may need your support, however small or large, but our staff pride themselves on knowing that the Rainbow Room provision tries to support every family in our school community, providing hope beyond the school gates.

 

 

PD Day – Monday 6th November

School is closed to children on Monday 6th November as it is a planned PD Day.

All children return to school on Tuesday 7th November – doors open at 8.30am.