This session will help your organisation – and specifically the Safeguarding Lead – to begin to develop a safeguarding Action Plan.
Learning outcomes
In this session, you will:
Learn how to develop a safeguarding Action Plan. |
Identify what safeguards already exist in your organisation. |
Set your |
Explore staff training and education. |
Collate and analyse information about safeguarding. |
You start by exploring why a safeguarding Action Plan is important.
The overarching goal of safeguarding is ‘to create a safe environment for everyone’. This goal is usually underpinned by two main aims:
To achieve these aims, every organisation should have its own safeguarding Action Plan that identifies and prioritises the steps it needs to take.
For example, to:
This plan should include details about all the actions needed to achieve all these steps, who is responsible, and a timeline for completing them. Most steps will require a series of linked actions to be undertaken, often over an extended period of months or years.
Understanding what safeguarding measures already exist across your organisation can help you identify where there may be gaps and therefore potential risks. This is the starting point for identifying priorities and developing a safeguarding Action Plan.
In the next activity, Patience shares her experience of assessing what safeguarding measures are in place in her organisation.
Listen to Patience’s explanation and the safeguarding actions she identified.
Once you have considered all the actions, identify which three actions you would prioritise.
All these actions will help safeguard athletes; they are all important and need to be addressed. However, Patience needed to prioritise some of these actions based on her assessment of their urgency.
Which THREE of Patience's actions do you think are the most appropriate? Vote for your top three actions in the opinion poll below Choose your three actions from a list. Please note that your vote in the poll is anonymous. Other learners cannot see how you have voted, and you cannot see how they have voted. You can see the vote tally only. |
There is no right or wrong answer regarding the priorities, but it is important for you to be able to explain how you decided to order the tasks.
Here are the three priorities that Patience considered most urgent.
Every organisation will have some safeguarding measures in place – even if they don’t use the word ‘safeguarding’ to describe them – and every organisation will still have work to do to strengthen their safeguarding measures. You may find that safeguarding measures are only in place for some activities, or in some facilities – and are not part of a comprehensive, consistent approach.
This is why it is so important for you to gain a picture of what measures are in place, for whom, and where, to help you plan for how to address any gaps. |
You will explore this in more detail in the next section.
Once you have identified any gaps in safeguarding, it’s important that your organisation develops a safeguarding Action Plan which will capture all the areas that need to be prioritised and covered.
An Action Plan is a simple way for an organisation to identify priorities and monitor progress across the full range of safeguarding plans and actions. It should be used to help your organisation plan and prioritise work.
An overall Action Plan will detail the steps you need to take to strengthen and embed safeguarding. The plan needs to make clear what needs to be done, by when, and by who.
Over time, actions may become more specific. Some actions can only be identified after areas of risk have been identified.
Let’s hear from Patience again as she describes her safeguarding Action Plan.
Listen to Patience talking about her safeguarding Action Plan. How did developing the plan help her? What kinds of safeguarding actions did she include?
What did you notice?
Patience found that her Action Plan provided an overview of all the safeguarding work needed across the organisation. Having an Action Plan that she updated, helped to prioritise safeguarding activities and provided an easy way to share progress – and challenges – with senior managers.
You can find a Template for an Action Plan on the Safeguarding Resources site.
One critical part of your organisation’s safeguarding response is to develop your policies and procedures. If you don’t already have them in place, they should be a high priority in your Action Plan. You will still need to prioritise which areas you develop first.
Look at the safeguarding checklist below.
Pick out three actions that you think should be your organisation’s initial top priorities. Which actions would be top of your list – and why?
There aren’t any absolutely right or wrong answers here, and all organisations are at different stages of the safeguarding journey. |
Your Action Plan should also include ways in which the organisation will help all staff and volunteers to recognise safeguarding concerns and know how to report them. This will include:
This training is vitally important to help everyone understand abuse and how they can identify the signs and indicators of abuse and report their concerns.
The starting point for developing training is to conduct a Training Needs Analysis – you will find out more about that next.
A Training Needs Analysis (TNA) is a systematic approach that helps you identify:
Take a look at the TNA template below and complete the missing sections for people at your organisation. We’ve added examples in italics.
| Type of staff role | What do they need to know? | What training have they done already? | What additional learning is needed? |
|---|---|---|---|
| People with no significant contact with, or responsibility for children or vulnerable adults, e.g. finance team. | e.g. How to recognise and report safeguarding concerns. | e.g. Basic introduction to safeguarding as part of an induction. | e.g. Annual refresher training on identifying concerns. |
| People with significant or regular contact with children or vulnerable adults, e.g. coaches. | e.g. How to assess risk; the impact of abuse; recognising abuse; how to report concerns; supporting someone who | ||
| Senior managers and Board Members. | e.g. Overall understanding of the basics of safeguarding. | ||
| Safeguarding Leads and focal points. | e.g. How to receive, record and refer a report; how to start an internal investigation; when and how to start a disciplinary investigation. |
Every organisation is different, and the types of activities you support, the type of learning staff have already done, and the type of roles they undertake will all impact what your training plan will need to cover.
Let’s now consider how to design and develop the training that staff need to fulfil their safeguarding responsibilities.
Who needs what level of safeguarding training?
In sport, people often think that safeguarding only applies to coaches and others who have direct contact with children or vulnerable adults. This isn’t true. As you know, everyone in your organisation needs to understand what safeguarding is, why it is important, and what they should do if they have concerns about a child or adult’s welfare.
As a minimum, everyone needs to complete the Safeguarding Essentials course that introduces them to these topics. For some staff – for example, office administrators or others in roles that involve no contact with children or vulnerable adults – this training may be enough. For other staff, the Essentials level of training is a useful introduction to safeguarding but will need to be followed by further training.
What should Essentials training include?
Here is a summary of the contents of the Safeguarding Essentials course:
What about training for people who have regular contact with children or vulnerable adults? You consider this next.
Staff or volunteers with responsibilities for – or significant contact with – children and other vulnerable groups need to understand more about safeguarding, to help them consider the risks associated with their role or area of work and how to reduce them.
Coaches, medics, physios, officials, and others whose role involves responsibility for children and other vulnerable groups, need to be clear about the expectations of them and how to identify concerns in their work environment. This also applies to other roles – for example, residential or event staff who may be responsible for children who are away from home.
Intermediate-level training normally has certain core content. Can you think what this would be?
a.
What is safeguarding?
b.
How to undertake a safeguarding investigation.
c.
Safeguarding is everybody’s responsibility.
d.
The main types of abuse, including indicators of abuse.
e.
What is peer bullying?
f.
Poor practice by adults in sport.
g.
Risk assessing information from police or criminal records checks.
h.
What to do if there are concerns about a child and how to respond to a
i.
How to help make sport a safe, happy, and positive environment for everyone.
j.
Signposts for further information and support.
k.
How to provide direct counselling for abused children or young women.
The correct answers are a, c, d, e, f, h, i and j.
This content is typical of many intermediate-level safeguarding courses. However, the three subject areas we identified are only appropriate for staff with specific safeguarding roles. These subjects would be included in role or context-specific training.
Now let’s move on to think about ‘role or context-specific’ training.
Some other groups need role or context-specific safeguarding training that is designed to address their specific safeguarding responsibilities and their work context.
For example, Board Members have a more strategic, organisational leadership safeguarding role – so their training needs to address their corporate and legal responsibilities, in particular around allocating appropriate resources for safeguarding, managing safeguarding risks, their accountability for implementing safeguarding arrangements, and their role in creating a safe sport. Your
Some other groups (including Safeguarding Leads, disciplinary, compliance, and Human Resources staff) have important parts to play in processes established to safeguard those involved in sport. They need training that will help them promote a person-centred and trauma-informed approach in practice, clarify expectations of the behaviour of adults, identify and manage risk, and manage safeguarding concerns.
Competition coordinators are involved in risk assessing and planning competitions that may involve many different junior teams, adults, travel, and accommodation – they need to understand how to prioritise safeguarding throughout the process of organising and delivering these competitions, as well as communicating safeguarding expectations to all those taking part.
Each group needs specific training to make sure that they understand why and how safeguarding relates to their situation. |
In addition to identifying gaps and prioritising actions, it is important to collect data on all reported safeguarding cases.
By monitoring the nature of safeguarding cases, trends can be identified that require a more strategic response. For example, case data may indicate an increase in reports involving the misuse of digital technologies, concerns arising within residential settings, or a particular group of athletes.
Any of these should result in a review of the area of concern and may lead to an update of the organisation’s Action Plan, for example, to include updating existing policies, procedures, or training – or the development of entirely new safeguarding arrangements.
| The main learning and messages from this session are: |
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Congratulations on completing Course 2 Safeguarding Practice! You should now have a greater understanding of what safeguarding is and how it can work in your organisation or sport.
To receive your course certificate and digital badge, you need to have completed all the course content and passed the two course quizzes. The second quiz is next.
Now it’s time to complete quiz 2 – it’s a great way to check your understanding of the course content.
This quiz contains 16 questions and a pass mark of 70% and above is required to obtain your digital badge and course certificate.
You can review the answers you gave, and which were correct/incorrect, after each attempt has been completed.
If you don’t pass the quiz at the first attempt, you are allowed as many attempts as you need to pass. There is a 24-hour delay between each attempt to allow you time to look back at the course content again.