August 10, 2022
Implementing an effective digital safeguarding technology system within your school can transform academic performance and student outcomes.
Digital safeguarding technology is a key driver in improving focus and learning, both in class and in prep, and study times. The root of improvement created by digital safeguarding technology is a result of identifying risk concerns in students and tackling issues quickly. This can reduce challenging behaviour in class and reduce students in crisis that could lead to either leaving the school with poor mental health or being excluded for breaking school rules.
Learn how Independent and Catholic schools can address student digital wellbeing challenges and build a positive digital culture.
Download our essential guide, "Student digital safety and wellbeing - how to find and close the gaps."
All children will face challenges and issues along the path to adulthood, but the way in which these adverse experiences are identified and tackled can change the long-term outcome. The UK Government's 'Mental Health and Behaviour in Schools’ published in November 2018, outlines the need for schools to prevent, identify, provide early support, and, when needed, access specialists. Schools showing best practice will adopt new methods to identify concerns so that early support can be reached.
A change to the whole school culture can be achieved by approaching risk concerns at an early stage. For instance, research into bullying found: “a causal contribution of exposure to bullying at 11 years to concurrent anxiety, depression, hyperactivity and impulsivity, inattention, and conduct problems.”
The research also found that: “as time elapsed from exposure, the direct contributions of exposure to bullying in childhood to mental health dissipated.”
This shows that schools have real potential to reduce poor mental health outcomes in students by ending exposure and tackling bullying as early as possible.
The research overview published together with the Ofsted inspection guidance 2019 cited: “While obviously a major issue in itself, there is also evidence that bullying can have a negative impact on pupil attainment, and that reducing bullying can be associated with improved attainment.”
But issues such as bullying can be hard for schools to spot. Independent schools also have the added challenge that parents are often working long hours, or where boarding schools are concerned, may even be in loco parentis. Parents rely on schools to be able to detect any issues and will expect to be aware of them at an early stage. With expensive school fees, the expectations of school processes to ensure wellbeing and help students reach their full academic potential is paramount.
Digital safeguarding technology can aid schools in achieving the need to identify problems as they emerge. Often students will suffer in silence and find it hard to express that they are having issues. Linewize research found that 98% of teachers rely on students to tell them they are being bullied, but only 5% of students felt that they would be able to tell a teacher.
Instead, they may show signs of being withdrawn or show disruptive behaviour in class. These signals can easily be misinterpreted for normal teenage mood swings and development. It may take considerable time before a school realises that there is something more serious developing. By then, root issues may have been missed with secondary issues starting to appear, such as self-harm or substance abuse.
Digital safeguarding technology can identify concerns at an early stage, allowing schools to act quickly before they have a chance to escalate. For instance, a pupil that is being bullied may receive a hate message online. An effective Digital Safeguarding Technology system will identify this as a concern and discretely alert wellbeing staff that an incident has taken place. Other examples in which Digital Safeguarding Technology might identify a student at risk include:
A third party sending a threatening message to a student.
A student searching for ‘thinspiration’ websites.
A student organising to smoke illegal substances with another student.
A student looking for pornography.
A teacher writing to a student inappropriately.
Identifying a student making anonymous hate comments about another student on a website.
A third party exploiting a student into not telling their teachers or a parent.
Adverse experiences can have an impact on academic and wellbeing outcomes, which may affect the overall success and reputation of a school. Schools can use digital safeguarding technology to aid them in their identification of risk concerns, helping to reduce disruption and improve behaviour and pupil engagement, a crucial factor for maintaining and increasing academic excellence.
Student digital safety and wellbeing - how to find and close the gaps - An essential guide for Australian Independent and Catholic schools.
Our free practical whitepaper is designed to guide you through the challenges around student digital safety and wellbeing and build a positive digital culture.
Self-harm in Australian Independent Schools – Spotting signs of risk
Learn how digital safeguarding technology can help to identify signs of student self-harm.
READ MORE
Eating Disorders in Independent Schools: Spotting the digital cues
Eating disorders can significantly impact a student's wellbeing and academic achievement. Digital safeguarding technology can identify student concerns as they emerge.
READ MORE
Digital Safeguarding and Stress – How to spot silent sufferers before it impacts learning outcomes
Picking up subtle behaviour signals that indicate a child is at risk allows staff to intervene and provide the support needed.
READ MORE
Schools often ask us what a full cyber safety day actually looks like. The truth is, there’s no single template. Every school has its own ...
We use cookies and similar technologies to make our website work, to understand how it is used, and, with your permission, to personalise content and show you relevant advertising on other platforms. Some of these technologies are provided by our partners. Essential cookies are always on, because the site cannot function without them. Everything else stays off until you choose to turn it on. You can accept all, reject all non-essential cookies, or set your own preferences, and you can change your choice at any time. For more detail, see our Cookie Policy and Privacy Notice.
In the US? You also have the right to opt out of the sale or sharing of your personal information and to limit the use of your sensitive personal information. Manage these under "Your US privacy choices".
While some cookies are necessary to make our website and services function properly, consent for all non-essential cookies has been automatically declined. You can change your preferences at any time. To find out more about the cookies we use, see our Cookie Policy and Privacy Notice.
Choose which cookies and technologies you are comfortable with. Essential cookies keep the site secure and working, so they are always on. You can switch the other categories on or off, then save your choices. You can return here at any time to change them. See our full list of cookies.
These cookies and technologies are needed for the site to work safely and reliably. They support core functions such as security, network management, bot and fraud protection, and remembering your privacy choices. The site cannot run without them, so they cannot be switched off.
Providers: Cloudflare, HubSpot
We use a set of cookies that are optional for the website to function. They are usually only set in response to information provided to the website to personalize and optimize your experience as well as remember your chat history.
Providers: HubSpot
These help us understand how visitors find and use our website, including which pages are viewed and how people navigate and interact with them, so we can improve it. Some of this involves recording how pages are used. We do not use this information to advertise to you.
Providers: Google, Hotjar, HubSpot, Microsoft.
These let us measure how our campaigns perform and show you relevant advertising on third-party platforms, such as search engines and social media. They involve sharing limited information with advertising partners, who may combine it with data they already hold. For US visitors, turning this category on allows the "sale" and "sharing" of personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising, as those terms are defined under US state privacy laws.
Providers: Google, HubSpot, LinkedIn, Microsoft, Reddit.
If you are a resident of a US state with a comprehensive privacy law (such as California, Colorado, Connecticut, Texas, Virginia and others), you have additional rights over how your personal information is used. You can exercise the choices below without affecting your access to our website.
When our advertising and marketing technologies are active, we may sell or share your personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising. To opt out, switch off the Advertising and Marketing category above, or use the toggle here.
Where we process sensitive personal information, such as precise geolocation, you can ask us to limit its use to what is necessary to provide our services and other purposes permitted by law.
We recognize browser-based opt-out preference signals. If your browser or device sends a Global Privacy Control signal, we will treat it as a valid request to opt out of the sale and sharing of your personal information for that browser or device.
We do not knowingly sell or share the personal information of consumers under 16, and we do not use it for targeted advertising, without the consent required by law. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children under 13 without verifiable parental consent.
Changed your mind?
You can withdraw or update your consent at any time using the "Cookie settings" link in our website footer.