Advice for parents to help safeguard your children, provided by Google

  • Keep computers in a central place. This makes it easier to keep an eye on your child’s activities.
  • Know where your child goes online. If you have young children you might use the internet with them. For older children you could talk about what kinds of sites they like to visit and what isn’t appropriate for your family. You can also check where your child has been by looking at the history in your browser menu. Another option is to use filtering tools like Google SafeSearch.
  • Teach internet safety. It’s impossible to monitor your child’s online activity all the time. As they get older, they need to know how to use the internet safely and responsibly when they’re on their own.
  • Use privacy settings and sharing controls. Many sites that feature user-generated content, including YouTube, Blogger and social networking sites, have sharing controls that put users in charge of who sees personal blogs, photos, videos and profiles. Using sharing controls is particularly important when you share personal information such as names, addresses and phone numbers, on public sites. Teach your child to respect the privacy of friends and family by not identifying people by name in public profiles and pictures.
  • Protect passwords. Remind your child not to give out their passwords. Teach your child how to create a memorable password and record it safely. Make sure they make a habit of unclicking ‘remember me’ settings on public computers such as those at school or in the library.
  • Beware of strangers. Teach your child not to arrange in-person meetings with people they ‘meet’ online, and not to share personal information with online strangers because people may not be who they claim to be.
  • Help prevent viruses. Use anti-virus software and update it regularly.
  • Make sure your child avoids downloading from file-sharing websites and don’t accept files or open email attachments from unknown people.
  • Teach your children to communicate responsibly. Take the following as a good rule of thumb: if you wouldn’t say it to someone’s face, don’t text it, instant message it, or post it as a comment on someone’s page.
  • View all content critically. Just because you see it online, there’s no guarantee it’s true. Children should learn how to distinguish reliable sources from unreliable ones, and how to verify information they find online. Make sure children understand that cutting and pasting content directly from a website may be plagiarism

Please click here to read the Online Safety Policy.

Useful Links

Internet Matters – https://www.internetmatters.org

Online safety advice from Dr Linda for moving to secondary school – https://www.internetmatters.org/start-school-safe-online

Useful Safeguarding Documents

Click here for A Parents Guide to WhatsApp

Click here for A Parents Guide to YouTube

Click here for A Parents Guide to Fortnite

Click here for A Parents Guide to Netflix

Click here for A Parents Guide to SnapChat

Click here for A Parents Guide to FIFA 21

Click here for Preventing Bullying – A Guide for Parents

Click here for Holiday Safety Guidelines for Parents

Click here for Grandparents Guide to Bullying and Digital Safety

Click here for advice regarding Youtube

Click here for advice regarding Nintendo Switch

Click here for advice regarding WiiU

Click here for advice regarding Xbox 360

Click here for advice regarding Xbox One

Click here for advice regarding Nintendo 3DS

Click here for advice regarding Playstation