Development or revision of e-safety or Internet Safety Education (ISE) for students should include collaboration on school or organization’s digital codes of conduct (including responsible use, social media and digital communication policies for students and teachers), online safety policies in addition to developing digital literacy and citizenship skills across the curriculum supporting a ‘do no harm’ approach.
- 1 to 1 Teacher Backgrounders: teaching tips for every topic (CommonSense)
- Digital Citizenship Full Curriculum (CommonSense)
- eSafety Commission Toolkit (eSafety Commision, Australia) Key Resource
- Guidelines for Parents and Educators (ITU-COP)Key Resource
- NetSmartz Educator’s Guide US
- Online Abuse Statistics Infographic (EVAC)
- Online Grooming of Children Report (ICMEC)
- Online Safety for Children with Intellectual Disabilities (eSafety, AU)
- Online Safety Policy Templates UK (SWGfL)
- Online Sexual Coercion and Extortion of Children (Europol, multiple languages) Key Resource
- Safety on Facebook
- Sample Scope and Sequence (CommonSense.org)
- Sexting in Schools UK (UKCCIS) Key Resource
- Step Up Speak Up Teaching Toolkit (Childnet, UK) Key Resource
- STAR Online Safety for Autistic Spectrum Disorders (Childnet, UK)
- Teaching students not to request nude photos (NYT)
- Teacher Lesson Plans and Resources (NetSmartz, NCMEC, UK)
- Young & eSafe Curriculum (Australia Office of eSafety Commissioner)