Safeguarding is not just a reaction to crisis; it is a proactive measure of creating an environment where the crisis doesn’t even happen.
Schools are mandated to move beyond “gate security” to a holistic “culture of safety.”
This note emphasizes the proactive side of child protection.
Content of this note
1. Safe School Culture
A safe culture is the “social immune system” of a school.
It is built on:
Shared responsibility
The belief that “safeguarding is everyone’s business,” from the principal to the gateman.
Student voice
Creating platforms (suggestion boxes, councils) where students feel safe to speak without fear of being silenced or shamed.
Zero tolerance
A visible commitment to addressing every breach of safety, no matter how small.
2. Ways of curbing violence in schools
Curbing violence requires moving away from traditional (punitive) measures toward modern (restorative) ones.
Positive discipline
Total abolition of corporal punishment in favor of “Time-outs,” loss of privileges, and guidance.
Conflict resolution
Teaching students ‘assertive’ rather than ‘aggressive’ communication.
Environmental design (CPTED)
Eliminating blind-spots in toilets and corridors and ensuring constant teacher supervision during “high-risk” times like break and closing.
3. Age-Appropriate Safety Education
Prevention starts with teaching children they have the right to be safe.
- Early Years (PANTS Rule): Teaching that “privates are private” and naming body parts correctly.
- Upper Primary: Distinguishing between Secrets (bad) and Surprises (good), and building a “circle of trust.”
- Secondary: Focus on consent, identifying ‘grooming‘ tactics and the dangers of cyber-abuse (sexting and digital footprints).
4. Staff Training Requirements
A teacher’s “Duty of Care” is only as strong as their training.
Tiered training
Universal training for all staff (Level 1), pedagogical training for teachers (Level 2) and specialized referral training for the Designated Safeguarding Lead (DSL) (Level 3).
Continuous development
Safeguarding knowledge must be updated annually to address new threats like “digital grooming.”
Induction
No staff member should have unsupervised access to children without first receiving safeguarding training.
5. Component of Safeguarding and Risk Assessment Plans
Safety must be documented in three core action plans:
Safeguarding plan
Outlines the “referral pathway” and who to contact when abuse is suspected.
Evacuation plan
Details escape routes and identifies Muster Point for emergencies (fire, security threats).
Risk assessment
A 5-step process (Identify, Evaluate, Decide, Record, Review) used to minimize hazards in the classroom or during school trips.
6. School-Community Collaboration
The school is the heart of a wider safety net.
- The SBMC & PTA: Formal bodies that help fund security (fencing, lighting) and hold the school accountable.
- Stakeholder partnerships: Linking with NAPTIP, the Police and local healthcare providers for medical and legal support.
- Traditional/Religious leaders: Working with local influencers to challenge harmful cultural norms like child marriage or domestic violence.





Leave a Reply