Social media safeguarding in schools is now a central safeguarding priority. While platforms help schools celebrate achievements and communicate with parents, they also introduce serious compliance and reputational risks if not properly managed.
Under Keeping Children Safe in Education (KCSIE), schools have a legal duty to safeguard pupils — including managing online behaviour, digital professionalism, and recruitment risks.
This guide explains the key risks, policy requirements, recruitment checks, and practical steps schools should take in 2026.
Schools must recognise the following high-risk areas:
These risks align with safer recruitment expectations outlined in our guide to Social Media Checks for Schools under KCSIE.
An effective social media safeguarding in schools policy should include:
Schools should align policies with Ofsted’s Education Inspection Framework, where safeguarding is a limiting judgement.
Safer recruitment now includes proportionate online checks of shortlisted candidates.
Best practice includes:
Schools can strengthen compliance using structured systems like adverse media checks integrated into safeguarding oversight.
Turning policy into practice requires structure:
Schools operating across multiple sites should ensure consistency, particularly within multi-academy trusts, where central oversight is essential.
Social media safeguarding in schools is no longer optional — it is a core safeguarding responsibility. Without structured policies, recruitment checks, and monitoring processes, schools increase inspection and reputational risk.
By implementing clear standards, maintaining audit-ready documentation, and integrating checks within the SCR, schools can protect pupils, staff, and their reputation while remaining compliant with national safeguarding guidance.
Next Steps:
Review your school’s social media safeguarding processes today. OnlineSCR helps schools integrate recruitment checks, monitoring, and safeguarding oversight into a single compliance-ready system.