Online Safety Summit

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Description

Put yourself in others’ shoes and learn how to stay safe online.


Resources

Scrap paper
Pens or pencils
Sticky tack

https://www.scouts.org.uk/activities/online-safety-summit/

Instructions

Before you begin
Make sure parents and carers are aware that you’ll be talking about staying safe online, so they can flag any potential issues and carry on conversations at home.

Staying safe online is a broad topic. We’ve included some key points below. You can also find more information in the ‘Stay safe’ resources for Cubs and Scouts, and on the Think U Know website.You may need to do some extra research before you get stuck in.
Talk about online safety
Everyone should get into a circle.
Everyone should think about the risks of the internet and ways to stay safe online, and share their ideas with the group. The person leading the game might need to help everyone come up with ideas and solutions.
People might think about using privacy settings on social media, remembering that you don’t always know who people online really are, how easy it is for people to download and use images, how adults might lie to children online, and cyberbullying.
Play 'Emotion commotion'
Allocate a different area of the meeting place to a different emotion. For example, different walls could represent 'happy', 'amused', 'embarrassed' or 'angry'.
You could write these emotions, or draw out the emojis, on scraps of paper and stick them to the walls or floor.
The person leading the game should read some online situations. Below are some suggestions for getting started.
You send your friend a picture of your new trainers. They reply: ‘Omg I had those trainers last year, they’re boring now.’
You share a funny video and people comment: ‘I don’t get it…’ ‘This is stupid!’ ‘No-one wants to see this.’
Someone from school sends you a text message: ‘I don’t like you, no one likes you, idiot!’
Your friend says they showed someone else your picture and they said you’re ugly.
Everyone should imagine being in the situation. They should move to stand by the emotion they think they’d feel.
The person leading the game should help everyone reflect on the situation, and what’s going on. We’ve included some suggested questions alongside the situations, to get you started.
The person leading the game should read another situation, and everyone should play again. They should keep reading the situations, and people could make up their own too.
Play 'Fruit salad'
Playing a game such as fruit salad is a great way to lift the mood a little, and divide everyone into groups of four to make their posters.

Give everyone the name of a fruit – apple, banana, pineapple, or mango.
Everyone should run around the room.
When the person leading the game calls ‘fruit salad!’, everyone should get into a group of four different fruits: one apple, one banana, one pineapple, or one mango.
Groups should split up and run around, then repeat step three until everyone’s had a chance to move around a little and feel a bit happier.
The last time groups split into groups of four, they should stay in their groups for the next activity.
Make a ‘safe online’ poster
Give each group a big sheet of paper and some pens. They should make a poster with their top tips for staying safe online – they might need to think back to the discussion everyone had at the start.
People might like to think about: what details shouldn’t you put online (such as pictures, details of where you live, and your school)? Should you give details (such as your address and phone number) to strangers? Should you use a webcam to talk to people you’ve not met offline? Can you make your profile on social media private, so only your friends (and parents and carers) can see it? Should you open emails from people you don’t know? What should you do if you’re worried about something you’ve seen online?
Everyone should take it in turns to show the group their poster.
You might want to display them in your meeting place, so everyone can learn.


Tags

  • address
  • computers
  • Emoji
  • game
  • online safety

Badge Links

  • Personal Safety - Online Safety