Level 3 Hybrid Safeguarding Children & Young People
25 December 2025 2025-12-25 22:34Level 3 Hybrid Safeguarding Children & Young People
Safeguarding foundations and professional responsibility
This module sets the culture for the day. We establish boundaries, clarify duties, and define what good safeguarding practice looks like in education and support settings.
Welcome, ground rules, confidentiality boundaries, neuro inclusive safeguarding context.
Safeguarding duties, DSL and DDSL roles, Equality Act duties, escalation pathways.
End of module quiz in LearnDash, scenario based, professional judgement required.
Welcome, ground rules, safeguarding context
- Set expectations for respectful, professional discussion
- Clarify confidentiality, and the limits of confidentiality
- Confirm how safeguarding concerns are managed today
- Introduce neuro inclusive safeguarding as a core professional duty
Confidentiality has limits, safeguarding is a duty
- We do not share identifiable details about children, families, staff, or cases
- We speak about practice, process, and professional judgement
- We use anonymised examples and scenario learning
- It does not mean keeping safeguarding information secret
- It does not mean avoiding reporting routes
- It does not mean delaying action to protect feelings
If anything is shared today that suggests a child or young person may be at risk, I must follow the setting safeguarding procedures, and I will inform the DSL or DDSL.
Neuro inclusive safeguarding, context not exemption
Neuro inclusive safeguarding means we understand how neurodivergence can affect communication, behaviour, and social understanding. We apply reasonable adjustments so that children and young people can be heard, and supported, and protected.
This improves safeguarding accuracy. It does not lower thresholds. It strengthens proportionate response and evidence based decision making.
- Use clear language, avoid idioms, check meaning
- Allow processing time, reduce verbal demand
- Offer choice of where to talk, if safe
- Do not rely on eye contact as a sign of truthfulness
- Record the child’s words accurately, avoid interpretation
Safeguarding duties, roles, Equality Act duties, escalation pathways
- Safeguarding and child protection, what the difference is
- Role of all staff, role of the DSL, role of the DDSL
- When to act immediately, when to consult
- How Equality Act duties support safe safeguarding practice
- Staff know what to do if they have a concern
- Staff can explain reporting routes confidently
- Staff record concerns clearly and promptly
- Culture supports speaking up, and professional curiosity
Keep returning to process. If someone says, I would handle it myself, ask, what is the safest route, and what does policy require.
Safeguarding, and child protection
Safeguarding is the wider duty to protect children from harm, promote welfare, and create conditions where children can learn and thrive. It includes culture, policies, staff behaviour, early help, and prevention.
Child protection is a specific part of safeguarding. It focuses on responding to concerns where a child may be suffering, or likely to suffer, significant harm. It involves referral, assessment, and multi agency action.
Roles, escalation routes, and staff responsibility
- Be vigilant, notice changes, and respond to concerns
- Receive disclosures safely, do not investigate
- Record accurately, report promptly
- Follow policy, seek advice early if unsure
- Lead safeguarding practice in the setting
- Assess concerns and coordinate referrals
- Ensure records are complete and secure
- Support staff, manage multi agency engagement
If you think a child may be at risk, you act. You do not wait for perfect information. You report to the DSL or DDSL promptly, and you record what you have.
Equality Act duties, reasonable adjustments, safeguarding accuracy
Safeguarding can fail when we misinterpret behaviour, or when we place barriers in the way of disclosure. Reasonable adjustments support communication and participation, and reduce the risk of missed harm.
Adjustments must support safety and timeliness. Adjustments must not delay reporting, and must not remove protective actions.
- Offering written, visual, or structured ways to share concerns
- Checking understanding of consent and boundaries explicitly
- Reducing sensory demand in difficult conversations
- Using trusted adults appropriately, without blocking disclosure
- Recording relevant context, without stereotyping
Decision Framework, Level 3 professional judgement
Use this to evidence decisions, reduce bias, and keep practice consistent.
Knowledge Check 1, Level 3 standard
Learners now complete the Module 1 quiz in LearnDash. This checks professional judgement, not recall alone.
- 10 questions total
- 6 scenario based, single best answer
- 2 role and escalation questions
- 2 short justification prompts, one to two sentences
- Correct immediate response to a disclosure
- Correct reporting route to DSL or DDSL
- Confidentiality boundaries applied correctly
- Equality Act adjustments applied without delaying safeguarding
- Fact versus interpretation in recording
- 80 percent overall
- One retry permitted
- Any unsafe answer triggers immediate trainer correction
- If below standard, trainer remediation before progression