The Office of the eSafety Commissioner works to keep Australians safer online by providing resources, programs and services that promote positive online behaviour.
In its 2018 State of Play: Youth, Kids and Digital Dangers report, the Commission identified that young people were exposed to a wide range of issues online from unwanted contact to bullying and dealt with these issues in a number of ways. They told the Commission that while negative experiences could be hurtful, they also found positive outcomes from these experiences in terms of increased awareness of online risks and ways of dealing with issues when they arise.
By using resources provided by the Office of the eSafety Commissioner teachers can encourage students to reflect on their personal skills and empower students to manage digital risks and negative online experiences.
A comprehensive approach to teaching online safety should focus on real issues young people face, covering respectful online relationships, eSecurity, privacy and personal information, balancing time online, cyberbullying and bystander behaviour, and accessing support.
The descriptions below provide advice and ideas on aligning online safety to the Australian Curriculum learning areas and general capabilities. The activity ideas complement the Commission’s resources listed at the end of this article.
Respectful online relationships
Learning areas: English, HPE, Science, HASS
General capabilities: ICT, Personal and Social, Ethical Understanding, Intercultural Understanding
Students’ online relationships can be informed by the social and emotional skills they learn in a school context. It is also important to impart and reinforce skills that will lead to healthy online behaviour. Practising digital relationship skills in school-based learning helps young people develop healthy online relationships by understanding consent in online interactions, showing resilience in bouncing back from negative experiences, and building a capacity to support others who need help. Teaching these skills provides an evidence-based framework for protection from cyberbullying and psychological injury.
Teachers can help students develop online relationship skills by:
- looking at popular culture on social media and asking students to identify respectful online communication
- role-playing with students on how to take responsibility in online situations. This might be through supporting others who are being targeted with negative comments or finding safe ways to speak out about offensive or harmful online content or behaviours.
- using real-life online discussions of topical events (for example, weather, sports) to start conversations about resilience; for example, identifying strengths, skills and coping strategies.
eSecurity
Learning areas: English, HPE, Digital Technologies
General capabilities: ICT, Personal and Social, Ethical Understanding, Intercultural Understanding
Smartphones, tablets, wearables and connected devices store information, allow calls and messaging, and provide 24-hour internet access from just about anywhere. With so much personal information stored on devices’ apps, email accounts and contacts, it is important to secure all types of devices and protect information.
Teachers can help students protect their information by:
- asking students to come up with their own device security habits; for example, when they will use passcodes or two-factor authentication
- creating ‘how-to’ videos to show how to set up your device so that your information is protected
- working in groups to role-play how they would feel and the actions they would take if they lost their device.
Privacy and personal information
Learning areas: English, HPE, Digital Technologies
General capabilities: ICT, Personal and Social, Ethical Understanding
Smartphones, tablets, wearables and connected devices store information, allow calls and messaging, and provide 24-hour internet access from just about anywhere. With so much personal information stored on devices’ apps, email accounts and contacts, it is important to secure all types of devices and protect information.
Teachers can help students protect their information by:
- asking students to come up with their own device security habits; for example, when they will use passcodes or two-factor authentication
- creating ‘how-to’ videos to show how to set up your device so that your information is protected
- working in groups to role-play how they would feel and the actions they would take if they lost their device.
Balancing time online
Learning areas: HPE, Science, Mathematics, The Arts
General capabilities: Personal and Social, ICT
With more and more mobile devices on the market, it is easy and tempting to stay connected 24 hours a day, seven days a week, but it is also very important for students to know how and when to disconnect. Spending excessive amounts of time online can have significant impacts on health, family and social life, as well as on academic performance at school.
Teachers can help students balance time online by:
- using heart rate monitor apps to measure heart rate and discuss the physical and psychological impacts of spending time online
- getting students to graph what is important to them and, using their own device data, to show how much time they spend on things they really care about
- providing opportunities for students to engage with nature and discuss their experiences, or asking students to come up with a viral video campaign to promote a range of fun offline activities.
Cyberbullying and bystander behaviour
Learning areas: English, HPE, HASS
General capabilities: ICT, Personal and Social, Ethical Understanding, Intercultural Understanding
Cyberbullying is the use of technology to bully a person or a group with the intent to hurt them socially, psychologically or even physically. One in five Australian children between the age of 8 and 17 have experienced cyberbullying. Cyberbullying is often an extension of bullying that is happening at school, and in the online environment the impact can be more severe. Cyberbullying is often hard to escape, it can be persistent enough to have serious effects on a young person’s wellbeing. Research shows that social and emotional skill development and the actions of bystanders can have a major impact.
Teachers can help students understand cyberbullying and promote helpful bystander behaviour by:
- getting students to read/write fictional stories to describe how people bully others and how those who are bullied feel
- working in groups to classify behaviours that would feel supportive/unsupportive if students were being cyberbullied
- using scenarios to practise the process of reporting cyberbullying, including collecting evidence, explaining the impact of bullying and the steps involved in reporting.
Encouraging help-seeking behaviour
Learning areas: HPE
General capabilities: ICT, Personal and Social, Ethical Understanding
Although encouraging help-seeking behaviours can be difficult, getting the right support can be beneficial in the long run. It is important that students know who can provide support for online safety issues such as friends and family, reporting tools that help flag and remove content, and trained professionals who can provide strategies and resources.
Teachers can help students become active help-seekers by:
- providing information sessions for students to understand the process of reporting cyberbullying, illegal content and scams
- involving students in planning and promoting school-based cyberbullying reporting policies
- buddying older students with younger students to help promote reporting and accessing support, including anonymous counselling services.
eSafety Commissioner resources for primary schools
One-off lessons
The Office of the eSafety Commissioner provides resources that cover a range of online safety and respect topics. The resources include video, activities and supporting materials, and can be used as conversation starters, short lessons or used combined to provide a comprehensive unit of work.
Comprehensive unit of work
#GameOn is a cybersafety video that follows the online experiences of a group of lower secondary students who find themselves in situations that catch them off-guard and teach them the consequences of making poor decisions online. The program provides teachers with engaging resources to explore the online safety issues raised by students. The resources are designed so that teachers can learn more about their students’ use of digital technology and online behaviour. The unit covers a range of online safety topics including cyberbullying, excessive gaming, sharing passwords, free downloads and online friends.
Live virtual classrooms
Students can participate in a free, live interactive eSafety workshop with one of our expert trainers. Using webinar learning, virtual classrooms allow an outreach trainer to work with many schools, even in remote areas. Each session provides up-to-date online safety knowledge and an opportunity to apply digital skills to real world dilemmas.
Further information
The Office of the eSafety Commisioner has a range of K–6 evidenced-based resources to assist schools in their delivery of online safety. Click here for a full list.
Safety and Respect Online is an accredited professional learning program consisting of three one-hour live webinars. Participants engage with an e-safety expert and complete an online quiz.
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