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  • Principles for social work in children’s social care

Principles for social work in children’s social care

Supporting young people’s online safety and experiences

This guide contains nine principles to help social workers and other social work professionals support foster carers and care experienced children understand how to safely benefit from being online. Each principle is accompanied by a rationale, as well as examples of what best practice and the risks may look like.

 

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Principles for social work in children's social care

Summary of principles

Professional practice: online safety policies

Achievable and consistent online safety policies and procedures are in place, regularly updated and understood by all.

Professional practice: training and updates

Training/updates on the risks, benefits and support for young people being online are regularly accessed and shared with the whole team.

Professional practice: online benefits

Online benefits and safety are routinely incorporated into working practice and considered
as part of contextual safeguarding.

Supporting carers: awareness of online safety policies

Foster carers understand and are aware of online safety policies, procedures and escalation routes.

Supporting carers: access to information and training

Foster carers are supported to understand and access information, training and help on the risks, benefits and support for young people being online.

Supporting carers: parental controls and online risks

Foster carers are supported in setting parental controls and discussing online risks, benefits and support with children in their care.

Supporting young people: giving voice

The voice of the child is listened to.

Supporting young people: engaging online

Young people use online connectivity to maintain healthy relationships, develop digital resilience and engage with the online environment in a supported way.

Supporting young people: consistent support

Joined up working between all those supporting the child is encouraged so they receive consistent support and advice about their online world.

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More to explore

See related advice and practical tips to support children online:

  • Advice for 0-5 years
  • Advice for 11-13 years
  • Advice for 14+ year olds
  • Advice for 6-10 years
  • Parental controls
  • Screen time resources
  • Social media safety
  • Support wellbeing with tech
  • Vulnerable children
  • Online issues
  • Cyberbullying
  • Inappropriate content
  • Sexting
  • Self-harm
  • Screen time
  • Radicalisation
  • Online grooming
  • Online pornography
  • Online reputation
  • Privacy and identity theft
  • Advice by age
  • Pre-school (0-5)
  • Young children (6-10)
  • Pre-teen (11-13)
  • Teens ( 14+)
  • Setting controls
  • Smartphones and other devices
  • Broadband & mobile networks
  • Gaming platform & other devices
  • Social media privacy guides
  • Entertainment & search engines
  • Connecting Safely Online
  • Resources
  • My Family’s Digital Toolkit
  • Online gaming advice hub
  • The dangers of digital piracy
  • Digital resilience toolkit
  • Social media advice hub
  • Guide to apps
  • Accessibility on Internet Matters
  • Schools resources
  • Early years resources
  • Primary school resources
  • Secondary school resources
  • Parent pack for teachers
  • News & opinion
  • Our expert panel
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