Learn how to keep personal information safe
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Description
Use these fun games to consider who we trust with our personal information.
Resources
Something to mark lines (for example, chalk, masking tape, or rope)
Hula hoops
Beanbags
Instructions
Before you begin
Use the safety checklist to help you plan and risk assess your activity. Additional help to carry out your risk assessment, including examples can be found here. Don’t forget to make sure all young people and adults involved in the activity know how to take part safely.
Make sure you’ll have enough adult helpers. You may need some parents and carers to help if you’re short on helpers.
Planning this activity
Mark out a line where everyone will throw their beanbags from.
Place four markers extending from the line in one metre intervals. For example, one marker will be one metre from the line; the next marker will be two metres from the line and so on.
Explaining the game
Gather everyone together.
Explain that in this game you’ll be exploring how well different people in our lives know us and what information they should have access to.
Everyone should be instructed to stand on the throwing line.
Explain that everyone will be given bean bags. They’ll represent different people in their lives.
Point out each of the four markers that you placed at 1m intervals from the throwing line to the group. Explain that each marker represents how well someone knows you.
You can decide in your group which marker represents one of the following statements:
Very well
Quite well
A little bit
Not at all
Playing the game
Explain that participants will be given a beanbag that will represent different people in their lives. Everyone should now be given a beanbag.
Explain that you’ll call out someone in the participant’s lives and the group need to throw their beanbag to the marker that represents how well they know the person or people mentioned
When everyone’s ready, call out an example of someone in people’s lives. After a count of three, everyone should throw their beanbag to the marker that they think is true to them.
Everyone should then retrieve their beanbag and return to the throwing line.
Keep repeating this with different people represented via the beanbags.
Examples of people
My classmates
My teachers
My extended family
Other teachers in the school
Strangers
Friends I only know online
Other young people in my school
Family friends
My friend’s parents
My neighbours
My section team leader
My school friends
Other members in my section
Learning how to protect personal information
Explain that in this next game everyone must decide if it’d be OK to share certain personal information about ourselves with other people, either in person or online.
The beanbags will now represent different pieces of information about the participants.
Each marker now represents one of the following statements:
I’d tell them if I knew them very well
I’d tell them if I knew them quite well or a little bit
I’d tell them if I didn’t know them at all
I wouldn’t share this
Explain that a type of personal information, such as address, will be read out. People should think about whether they would tell someone this information, depending on how well they knew them. You could think about the types of people in the first game and how will you think you know them to help you decide.
When they’ve made a decision, everyone should throw their beanbag to the marker of who’d they share that information with. For example, sharing ‘what the weather is today’ is OK to share with someone you didn’t know them at all, but ‘the name of your school’ is something that you shouldn’t share.
Everyone should be given a beanbag and instructed to stand at the throwing point.
You should consider having a discussion after each time the beanbags are thrown about why people chose the answer they did. You could discuss why people think the information was appropriate or not appropriate to share.
After the throw, everyone should then retrieve their beanbag and return to the throwing point.
Keep playing with different bits of personal information represented via the beanbags.
Pieces of information
Your full name
Your pets’ names
Your school’s name
A photo of your food
Your birthday
Music you’re listening to
Your email address
Your phone number
Photos of your pets
Your passwords
Your home address
Where you are right now
Your sock colour
Your username/nickname
What the time is
What today’s weather is
Your favourite superhero
Your friends’ names
Talk about keeping safe
Tell everyone that it’s always important to think about the things about us that we can share safely and who we can share them with. We should always keep personal things, such as our address, password, emails, phone number, full name, school and date of birth private. We can always check with a trusted adult if we’re unsure what we should be sharing.
If someone does ask us for personal information, either online or in person, remember that we shouldn’t share this information and to tell a trusted adult about it.
Tell everyone that it’s even more important to be mindful of the information we’re sharing online. There are lots of ways that people try to trick you into trusting them online, such as by pretending to be someone else.
Even if you like and trust someone you’ve met online, never share personal information with them, such as your address, full name, or where you go to school.
It’s important to understand how to stay safe online and keep your personal information safe, especially on social media. Some top tips are:
Always check what people can see in your privacy settings.
Log out of websites on shared devices.
Remember, it’s always OK to say ‘no’ politely and firmly if you don’t want someone else to post information about you or photos of you online.
If someone shares something that makes us feel unhappy or uncomfortable, tell a trusted adult. We can also report people, photos or posts that ask for or share our personal information to a platform.
Remember that people can use small clues, such as a school logo in a photo, to find out a lot about us.
Always think before you post. It’s best never to upload or share anything you wouldn’t want your parents, carers, teachers or future employers seeing. Once you post something, you lose control of it, especially if someone else screenshots or shares it.
Remember to check your contact or follower list every now and again, and consider removing people you don’t know.
Always consider other people before we share photos or information about them, too. If in doubt ask their permission, before you post something.
Take a look at our online safety tips for all sections for more guidance. Childline also has lots of great information about your privacy and keeping safe online for young people.
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