2. Objectives
• Update on current issues within schools regarding
esafety
• Update on OfSTED framework with regard to esafety
• Recap on resources and tools for further academic
research, guidance and support
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
4. E-Safety in the news
Can you think of anything relating to esafety
CEOP data
:
that has been recently on the news?
424 childr
en known
to have b
in this w a
ee
y over the
last 2 yea n blackmailed
rs
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
5. GTA V
Sexuality, Violence, Gender stereotyping, lack of parents
understanding
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
6. Discussion on your tables
• What have been the trends in your school over
the last year?
• What have you done at your school to deal with
this? (staff training, assemblies and so on?)
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
7. OfSTED updates
• September 2013 – Inspecting E-Safety guidance
• Mobile Phone use in primary framework
• Data handling guidance
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
10. Did this bother or upset you?
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
Source: EU Kids Online report 2013
11. It worries me when
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
People take a photo of me without my knowledge and upload it to an
inappropriate website. (Girl, 10, Bulgaria)
I see violence, child pornography pictures, religious sects, self-harm or suicide
sites. (Boy, 15, Greece)
When strangers message me on the Internet, sex sites that open without me
clicking on them. (Boy, 10, Austria)
I don’t know how correct information is on a website. You can also end up on a
site where you don’t wanna be. (Girl, 16, Belgium)
Some types of pornography, websites containing pictures/film of dead people
or animals appear. YouTube. The things that come up straight away as soon as
you search for the website. Facebook shows scary things even if you click on
something that does not look or sound scary. (Girl, 9, UK)
Propositions to meet from people whom I do not know, photos of naked
people, bullying somebody or scenes showing homicide. (Boy, 12, Poland)
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
Source: EU Kids Online report 2013
13. Porn tops the list
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
Source: EU Kids Online report 2013
14. Type of risk by age
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
Source: EU Kids Online report 2013
15. YouTube: The riskiest platform
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
YouTube. Terrible videos. Terrible images.
(Boy, 13, UK)
Showing images of physical violence, torture
and suicide images. (Girl, 12, Slovenia)
Those things that show other people's
suffering or torment as a funny thing. (Boy,
14, Hungary)
Violence against women and children and
perverted humiliations and cruelty against
people in general. (Girl, 14, Germany)
Animal cruelty, adults hitting kids. (Girl, 9,)
Denmark)
Some shocking news like terrorist attacks.
(Boy, 12, Finland)
I saw a video in which a little boy was
hanging in a Ferris wheel and men were
filming it. I was shocked because the men
did not help the boy, instead they stopped
the wheel and the boy fell down. (Girl, 15,
Finland)
Source: EU Kids Online report 2013
16. Risks by which platform
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
Source: EU Kids Online report 2013
21. The rise and dangers of sexting
•
•
•
In a 2008 survey of 1,280 teenagers and young adults of
both sexes on Cosmogirl.com sponsored by
The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy
, 20% of teens (13-20) and 33% of young adults (20-26)
had sent nude or semi-nude photographs of themselves
electronically. Additionally, 39% of teens and 59% of young
adults had sent sexually explicit text messages.
Research by the Internet Watch Foundation in 2012,
estimated that 88% of self-made explicit images are
"stolen" from their original upload location (typically
social networks) and made available on other websites, in
particular porn sites collecting sexual images of children
and young people.
Dangers to staff when dealing with these issues –
distribution and possession
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
22. Summary
Adult vs. child risk agendas:
•Children’s concerns about online risks are highly diverse, which is difficult for schools
•There is some mismatch between child and adult agendas – children more concerned
about violence than recognised schools and policy
Children’s priorities:
Diverse worries in many contexts but priorities are:
•Some (many?) children find pornography disgusting and violence scary, while they can
be irritated by other things on the internet
•YouTube concerns many children (though in other ways they love it), for its
violent/gory/scary/horrifying content . This is mainly the amateur content, shared p2p,
focused on physical violence, often with vulnerable (child, animal) victims also much is
realistic, even real (e.g. from the news), but decontextualised
Babcock 4S Limited
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
23. Further research and reading
• http://
www.lse.ac.uk/media@lse/research/EUKidsOnline/Presentations/EUKidsO
• http://
www.lse.ac.uk/media@lse/research/EUKidsOnline/EU%20Kids%20III/Rep
• EU Kids online 2013 http://www.lse.ac.uk/media
%40lse/research/EUKidsOnline/EU%20Kids
%20III/Reports/Intheirownwords020213.pdf
• Zero to eight – Young people and their internet use
http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/52630/1/Zero_to_eight.pdf
• Support from 4S consultants and the www.surreyesafety.co.uk
website
Babcock 4S Limited
• E-Safety drop-in, conference (workshops January 2014) and
www.babcock-education.co.uk/4S
bespoke support