Work to keep children safe online is ongoing in the ChildFund Alliance
ChildFund Australia began addressing this issue when Internet capacity where they work in Vietnam ballooned to more than 70 percent, with more than 70-million people online.
Their Swipe Safe project was launched in 2017 to educate young people on potential risks, including cyber scams, bullying and sexual abuse, sharing tips for youth to protect themselves. The outcomes have been hopeful with all surveyed project participants saying they learned at least one way to protect themselves online. The next step is to ensure children are safe from online violence with support from a strengthened child-protection system.
Children Believe is adapting new ways to keep kids safe online
Indeed, the need to foster online safety is growing rapidly. At Children Believe, during the pandemic, we equipped creative learning centres in 130 program communities in India with technology, so children had access to learn online. With that, we trained staff who share with volunteers how to educate children about keeping safe online.
Meanwhile, our Paraguay team has been building online safety awareness campaigns for in-person training, social-media sharing and literature to educate about safe Internet use. They, like our India team, are testing models for our other country programs to follow.
Indeed, there’s a lot of work we need to do. We’re keen to join our ChildFund Alliance partners in being intentional about taking this initiative from awareness-building to policy-changing to empowering children with tools to speak up and protect their online safety rights.
Learn more about the plan we’ll follow as we continue to engage with CFA and train more front-line staff to keep kids safe online.