E-Safety Policy

Parish of Gossops Green and Bewbush E-Safety Policy

This policy should be read alongside the Parish of Gossops Green and Bewbush’s policies on Safeguarding, Whistleblowing, Anti-Bullying, and Reporting Concerns about a Child.

 

This policy applies to all staff, including clergy, PCC members, paid staff, volunteers including children’s and youth workers, those involving in leading or coordinating music and worship, and anyone else involved in working or volunteering on behalf of Gossops Green and Bewbush.

 

Purpose of Policy

 

  • To protect children and young people who are ministered to by Gossops Green and Bewbush and who make use of information technology (such as mobile phones/devices, games consoles and the Internet) as part of their involvement with the parish.
  • To provide our staff. volunteers, and parents with the overarching principles that guide our approach to e-safety.
  • To ensure that, as a Christian community, we minister in line with our values, and also within the law, in terms of how we use information technology and behave online.
  • To guide us as we seek to equip the children and young people with whom we minister to be safe, discerning, and wise users of information and communication technology.

 

We recognise that:

 

  • The welfare of the children and young people to whom we minister and with whom we come into contact is paramount and should govern our approach to the use and management of electronic communications technologies and online behaviour.
  • All children, regardless of age, disability, gender, racial heritage, religious belief, sexual orientation, or identity, have the right to equal protection from all types of harm or abuse.
  • Working in partnership with children, young people, their parents, careers, and other agencies is essential in promoting young people’s welfare, and in helping young people to be responsible in their approach to e-safety.
  • The use of information technology is an essential part of all our lives; it is involved in how we as a church gather and store information, as well as how we communicate with each other. It is an intrinsic part of the experience of children and young people and is greatly beneficial to all. However, it can present challenges in terms of how we use it responsibly, and, if misused either by an adult or a young person, can be actually or potentially harmful.

 

We will seek to keep children and young people safe by:

 

  • Treating any child protection concern arising from the online world in the same way, taking it just as seriously, as concerns arising from the offline world.
  • Ensuring that our parish safeguarding officer has access to up-to-date information and training regarding online safety, assisting them as appropriate to access this training.
  • Ensuring that all staff and volunteers at Gossops Green and Bewbush avoid using private forms of electronic communication (text message, email, direct messaging including on social media) to communicate with the children and young people they are responsible for.
  • Taking the use of such private communication between staff or volunteers and young people as seriously as one-on-one contact between adults and children without another responsible adult present. It is always the responsibility of the adult staff member or volunteer to put appropriate boundaries in place in their relationships with the young people with whom they minister, in both the offline and online worlds.
  • Using open online forums to communicate with children, such as Facebook youthgroup pages to notify young people of events etc.
  • Avoiding any form of inappropriate content in what we, our staff and our volunteers post online, including (but not limited to) sexual content, racist, sexist, or otherwise bigoted content, or content promoting illegal activity.
  • Maintaining electronic versions of sensitive personal data securely, according to the principles of the Data Protection Act.
  • Providing age-appropriate awareness material, including training, to children and young people with regards to online safety. In particular, we will make them aware of the Thinkuknow website, and about Childline.
  • Providing awareness material to parents with regards to online safety. In particular, we will make them aware of the Thinkuknow, Parents Protect, NSPCC, UK Safer Internet Centre and vpnMentor websites.  Links to all are within this document.

 

 

Resources:

The Thinkuknow website provides a huge amount of information, for both children and adults, across many aspects of online (and offline) child protection. It is highly recommended that churches make both children and parents aware of this site and use it within their children’s and youth work.

Parents Protect is a website created by Stop it Now and the Lucy Faithfull Foundation and aims to prevent child sexual abuse through raising awareness and encouraging early recognition and response. It is highly recommended that churches make parents aware of this site and encourage them to use it (particularly by creating a ‘Family Safety Plan’, which the website provides guidance for).

NSPCC have a ‘Keeping Children Safe Online’ information and resource page.  This is a useful resource, for parents to understand more of what their children do online and how to help them stay safe.

UK Safter Internet Centre Provides support and services to children and young people, adults facing online harms, and professionals working with children.

vpnMentor.com Have a dedicated page called ‘The Ultimate Guide to Protecting Your Child online in 2023.  It offers guidance provided by a group of cybersecurity experts and parents, which has been updated for 2023, and is all about steps you can take to protect your child online.

Click here to download a pdf copy of our E-Safety Policy.