Safeguarding
Treleigh Safeguarding Team (ID 1238)
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Mrs. S. WilliamsDesignated Safeguarding Lead
Mrs. S. Williams
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Mr S. ProctorDeputy DSL
Mr S. Proctor
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Mrs. N. WinnanAdditional Safeguarding Lead
Mrs. N. Winnan
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Miss D. GoodmanSafeguarding Governor
Miss D. Goodman
What is safeguarding and why is it so important?
- Protecting children from maltreatment
- Preventing impairment of children’s mental and physical health or development
- Making sure children grow up in circumstances consistent with the provision of safe and effective care
- Taking action to enable all children to have the best outcomes
During school hours/term time, please contact our Designated Safeguarding Lead Mrs Williams with questions or concerns. For urgent queries outside of school hours or term time, or if are worried about a child or young person's safety please telephone the Multi Agency Referral Unit (MARU) on 0300 123 1116.
Types of Abuse and things to look out for
Neglect
Neglect the most common type of abuse and is the persistent failure (of a parent or carer) to meet a child’s basic physical and/or psychological needs, likely to seriously impair their health or development, including: failing to provide adequate food, clothing and shelter; failing to protect a child from physical harm or danger; failing to protect a child from emotional harm; failing to make sure a child has proper supervision; failing to get medical care or treatment for a child; failing to meet or respond to a child’s basic emotional needs.
Things to look out for
- Severe and persistent illnesses and infections
- Consistently inappropriate clothing or shoes
- Persistently smelly or dirty
- Signs of malnutrition
- Numerous accidents
- Poor medical and dental care
- Being hungry, stealing or hiding food
- Missing school
Physical
This means causing physical harm to a child, including: hitting; shaking or throwing; burning or scalding; poisoning; drowning or suffocating; fabricating the symptoms of, or deliberately inducing, illness.
Things to look out for
- Bruises, cuts, scratches, scars
- Fractures
- Bite marks
- Burns or scalds
- Suspicious illnesses
- Vomiting, drowsiness or seizures
- Breathing problems
Sexual
Sexual abuse is forcing or enticing a child to take part in sexual activities, including: physical contact, for example kissing, touching or rape; non-contact abuse, for example involving a child in looking at or producing sexual images; ‘upskirting’ (taking a photo under someone’s clothes without them knowing, to humiliate, distress or alarm them, or for sexual gratification); encouraging sexually inappropriate behaviour; grooming in preparation for child abuse…
Things to look out for
- Difficulty sitting
- Marks and bruises
- Poor personal hygiene
- Needing the toilet a lot
- Pregnancy
- Fear or avoidance of a particular person
- Sexually inappropriate behaviour
- Dropping hints or mentioning ‘secrets’
Emotional
Emotional abuse is persistent emotional maltreatment, severely affecting a child’s emotional development, including: making a child feel worthless, unloved or inadequate; silencing or ‘making fun’ of what a child says; placing extreme limits on what a child can do; imposing inappropriate age or developmental expectations; exploiting or corrupting; serious bullying (including cyber-bullying); exposing a child to ill-treatment.
Things to look out for
- Behaviour, language or knowledge you wouldn’t expect for their age
- Struggling to control their emotions
- Seeming isolated from their parents or carers
- Negative interactions with parents or carers
- Lacking social skills or friends
- Low self-esteem or self-confidence
- Trying to make people dislike them
- Not caring how they act or what happens to them
- Issues with language development
Child on Child abuse: children can abuse other children too online or in the real world
- Bullying includes cyberbullying and prejudice-based and discriminatory bullying – for example, bullying because of a child’s gender identity or sexuality
- Abuse in intimate personal relationships – like domestic abuse, this can be physical, emotional, sexual or financial
- Physical abuse could be, for example, hitting, kicking, shaking, biting, hair pulling
- Sexual violence could be rape, assault by penetration, sexual assault
- Sexual harassment includes sexual comments and jokes and online sexual harassment
- Causing someone to engage in sexual activity without consent could mean things like forcing someone to strip, touch themselves sexually, or to engage in sexual activity with a third party
- Sharing nude and semi-nude images or videos is also known as sexting or youth-produced sexual imagery
- Upskirting is where someone takes a photo under another person’s clothes without their permission, for sexual gratification, or to cause the victim humiliation, distress or alarm
- Initiation or hazing-type violence and rituals could include activities involving harassment, abuse or humiliation used as a way of initiating someone into a group
- Online peer-on-peer abuse may include:
- Abusive, threatening, harassing or misogynistic messages on social media or when gaming
- Sharing nude or semi-nude images and/or videos, especially around chat groups
- Sharing of abusive images and pornography, to those who don’t want to receive such content.
For further information and useful links please see below
/docs/General/treleigh-safeguarding-on-a-page-updated-19624.docx
https://archive.safercornwall.co.uk/
We are an Operation Encompass School
Treleigh is enrolled in Operation Encompass with Devon and Cornwall Police. Operation Encompass is:
the reporting to schools, prior to the start of the next school day, when a child or young person has experienced, any domestic abuse. Operation Encompass will ensure that a member of the school staff, (the Designated Safeguarding Lead) known as a Key Adult, is trained to allow them to liaise with the police and to use the information that has been shared, in confidence, while ensuring that the school is able to make provision for possible difficulties experienced by children, or their families, who have been experienced a domestic abuse incident.
https://www.operationencompass.org/
Prevent Duty
Treleigh school is committed to supporting the Prevent duty. This requires all schools to “have due regard to the need to prevent people being drawn into terrorism”, under the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015. The duty covers all types of extremism, whether political, religious or ideological.
The 2011 Prevent strategy has three specific strategic objectives:
- respond to the ideological challenge of terrorism and the threat we face from those who promote it
- prevent people from being drawn into terrorism and ensure that they are given appropriate advice and support
- work with sectors and institutions where there are risks of radicalisation that we need to address.
How do we support this in school?
All staff at Treleigh share a duty to protect pupils from the risk of radicalisation, as part of our safeguarding duties and we also seek to promote the spiritual, moral, social and cultural development of pupils.
We do this by…
- Promote the fundamental British values in our curriculum
- Make sure that Treleigh School is a safe space for pupils to discuss sensitive topics, including terrorism and extremism
- Ensure that we have robust safeguarding procedures to identify children at risk
- Engage with local authority risk assessments to determine the potential risk of individuals being drawn into terrorism in our local area
- We make sure that we have measures in place to protect pupils from harmful online content, including appropriate filtering systems
- Our staff receive training to help them identify pupils at risk, challenge extremist ideas, and know how to act if they have a concern
The designated safeguarding team have Prevent referral training.
What should I do if I have a concern?
Staff will follow the school’s usual safeguarding procedures.
If you are a pupil, a relation or anybody with a concern, you can discuss these with the DSL, and they will decide whether to involve other agencies such as the LA, police, social services, or Channel, the government’s programme for identifying and supporting those at risk of being drawn into terrorism.