2. Presented by Sue Tovell
Family Learning
For Homeless and Disadvantaged
People
3. Our goal today
To identify 2
benefits and 2
drawbacks of
using the Internet
To be able to explain
how talking to my
child may help to
keep them safe
online
22. Do our children know what to
share and want not to share?
Remember that the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child defines a child as everyone under 18.
• But the age of criminal responsibility in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is 10
years old.
• In Scotland the age of criminal responsibility is 8 years old but the age at which a
child can be prosecuted is 12 years.
• Note that the police will always treat children as a child first – they
prioritise those who profit not victims.
24. What are we posting
as adults and parents
(e.g. on facebook
etc..)
UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child;
Article 12 (Respect for
the views of the child):
When adults are
making decisions that
affect children,
children have the right
to say what they think
should happen and
have their opinions
taken into account.
27. What can I do right now?What can I do right now?
28. Sexting
Sending and receiving:
• naked pictures or 'nudes‘
• 'underwear shots‘
• sexual or 'dirty pics‘
• rude text messages or videos.
29. NEVER share explicit / naked photos Online
Remember once an image is on the
internet it’s there forever, you have no
copyright to it.
30. But if you have, it’s NEVER
too late to stop and report
someone who may be
exploiting you.
Check out the videos at:
www.nspcc.org.uk/prev
enting-abuse/keeping-
children-safe/share-
aware/
33. Our goal today
To identify 2
benefits and 2
drawbacks of
using the Internet
To be able to explain
how talking to my
child may help to
keep them safe
online
34. Now you are part of the Handsworth
online safety network!
Chat at the school gate.
Discuss with wider friends and family.
Let them know your household rules!
Q- Do our child know about what to share and want not to share?
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child defines a child as everyone under 18
The age of criminal responsibility in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is 10 years old.
In Scotland the age of criminal responsibility is 8 years old but the age at which a child can be prosecuted is 12 years. Children under 12 may be referred to a social worker and a children’s hearing.
NB - Police will only treat you as child first- police priority is those who profit not victims
Q- Do our child know about what to share and want not to share?
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child defines a child as everyone under 18
The age of criminal responsibility in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is 10 years old.
In Scotland the age of criminal responsibility is 8 years old but the age at which a child can be prosecuted is 12 years. Children under 12 may be referred to a social worker and a children’s hearing.
NB - Police will only treat you as child first- police priority is those who profit not victims
https://www.childline.org.uk/Videos/Pages/CyberbullyingBSL.aspx?Transcript=true
BSL video
Childline ….Ask SAM
Q. What are we posting as adults and parents eg facebook etc..
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
Article 12 (Respect for the views of the child): When adults are making decisions that affect children, children have the right to say what they think should happen and have their opinions taken into account.
Source -https://www.nspcc.org.uk/globalassets/documents/research-reports/mdx-nspcc-occ-pornography-report.pdf
Children were as likely to stumble across pornography (28%) as to search for it deliberately (19%).
Almost half of 11-16 year olds surveyed (47%) had never seen any pornography online.
At 11, the majority of children (72%) had not seen online pornography.
By 15, children were more likely (65%) than not to have seen online pornography.
Boys generate more explicit images online.
More boys and young men share image
trading nudes
dirties
pic for pic