
PARENT, CARER AND COMMUNITY WORKSHOPS
They are the same responsibility.
This isn’t about fear.
It’s about clarity.
Safe on Social parent sessions are grounded in digital duty of care.
Protecting children’s wellbeing, privacy, identity, reputation, and future opportunities is not a collection of separate responsibilities. It is one of the defining challenges of modern parenting, education, and community leadership. That’s why our parent and carer sessions are different.
These are not fear-based presentations. They are not technology takedowns. And they are certainly not exercises in parent blaming.
They are strategic briefings designed for adults raising children in the most complex digital environment in human history.
Today’s parents are navigating challenges that previous generations never faced: social media, algorithms, AI companions, group chats deepfakes, sexual extortion, online grooming, gaming ecosystems, digital footprints, misinformation, privacy erosion, and an attention economy designed to compete for their children’s time, trust, and identity.
The reality is that parents were never meant to manage this alone.
Yet too often they are left with conflicting advice, unrealistic expectations, and simplistic solutions that ignore the complexity of the problem. “Just take the phone away” is not a strategy. Neither is making parents feel responsible for systems they did not create.
We work with school communities that want something better.
Our sessions cut through the noise and provide clear, evidence-based guidance grounded in what is actually happening in the lives of children and young people today. We help parents understand the technologies shaping their children’s world, the risks that matter most, and the practical actions that make a genuine difference. Most importantly, we replace fear with confidence.
Parents leave with greater understanding, practical tools, stronger partnerships with their schools, and the reassurance that they are not expected to have all the answers. They simply need access to the right information, the right support, and a community working together toward the same goal. Because protecting children online is not a parenting problem. It is a shared responsibility. And when families, schools, and communities work together, children are far safer because of it.

