Adverse media checks for schools are becoming an essential part of safer recruitment in 2026. DBS checks have long been the cornerstone of school vetting — but they cannot give you the full picture. As the safeguarding landscape continues to evolve, more schools and Multi Academy Trusts are now adopting ISM (Internet Social Media) screening as a standard part of their recruitment process — and Ofsted is taking notice.
This guide explains exactly what an adverse media check involves, why your school needs one, and how OnlineSCR makes the process simple, compliant and fully integrated into your Single Central Record.
An adverse media check — referred to in OnlineSCR as an ISM (Internet Social Media) Check — is a structured search of publicly available online information about an individual. It draws from multiple sources to build a comprehensive picture of someone's online presence and reputation, including:
Unlike a DBS check — which is limited to criminal record data held by the police — this form of online screening captures a much broader range of reputational risk. A candidate may have no criminal record but still appear in news articles relating to misconduct, financial irregularities, or safeguarding concerns.
Current Keeping Children Safe in Education (KCSIE) guidance makes clear that schools should consider conducting online searches as part of their safer recruitment due diligence. Whilst not a statutory requirement, failure to demonstrate thorough vetting may be questioned during an Ofsted inspection.
KCSIE also requires that shortlisted candidates are informed that online searches may be carried out as part of the recruitment process.
A standard DBS check only reveals criminal convictions, cautions, and barred list information. It does not reveal:
An adverse media check fills this critical gap in your safer recruitment process. For a full overview of statutory vetting requirements, see our guide on barred list checks for schools.
Under the renewed Education Inspection Framework, Ofsted inspectors are placing greater emphasis on how effectively schools implement safer recruitment — not just whether the paperwork exists. Being able to demonstrate a thorough, multi-layered vetting process significantly strengthens your safeguarding evidence base.
Read our full Ofsted safeguarding compliance checklist for a complete pre-inspection guide.
A thorough ISM or online reputation screen can surface:
This information allows schools to make more informed recruitment decisions and document their due diligence thoroughly.
ISM and adverse media check screening should be conducted as part of the pre-appointment vetting process for:
Some schools are now extending screening beyond recruitment to conduct periodic checks on existing staff — particularly those in senior or sensitive roles. Whilst not yet a statutory requirement, this represents emerging best practice and demonstrates a proactive safeguarding culture.
Online reputation screening must be conducted lawfully under the Data Protection Act 2018 and UK GDPR. Key considerations include:
Current KCSIE guidance is clear — candidates must be informed that online searches may form part of your recruitment process. This should be included in your recruitment privacy notice and communicated at the shortlisting stage.
Only information relevant to the individual's suitability for the role should be retained. Irrelevant personal information should not be recorded.
Screening should be applied consistently to all candidates for a given role to avoid claims of discriminatory treatment under the Equality Act 2010.
Results are sent directly to the employer for review — they are not stored within the SCR system itself. However, the date the check was carried out is recorded in your Single Central Record. Once the employer has reviewed the findings, they complete the Evidenced By and Date Evidenced fields within OnlineSCR. This creates a clear, auditable record without storing sensitive result data centrally.
| DBS Check | Adverse Media / ISM Check | |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Police National Computer | Public online sources |
| Criminal records | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Allegations only |
| Barred list | ✅ Enhanced only | ❌ No |
| Media coverage | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Regulatory sanctions | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Financial misconduct | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Results stored in SCR | ✅ Date recorded | ⚠️ Date recorded only — results sent to employer |
| KCSIE referenced | ✅ Required | ✅ Recommended |
The two are complementary, not interchangeable. Best practice is to use both as part of a layered vetting approach. See also our guide on social media safeguarding in schools.
OnlineSCR makes online reputation screening simple, compliant, and fully integrated into your Single Central Record workflow.
Request ISM checks directly from within your OnlineSCR dashboard — no separate systems or manual processes required. Once ordered, the check is immediately logged with the issue date.
Findings are returned to the employer for review. The employer then:
Every check is date-stamped within your SCR. The Evidenced By and Date Evidenced fields provide inspectors with clear confirmation that vetting has been ordered, received, and reviewed.
For Multi Academy Trusts, OnlineSCR provides central visibility of screening status across all schools — so nothing slips through the cracks.
Not every finding requires the same response. When reviewing results, consider:
For more on compliance recording, see our guide on right to work checks in schools.
Not a statutory requirement, but current KCSIE guidance states schools should consider carrying out online searches as part of safer recruitment due diligence. Failure to demonstrate thorough vetting may be questioned at inspection.
No. They are complementary. DBS checks remain a statutory requirement. Online reputation screening provides an additional layer of vetting that DBS checks cannot cover.
No — results are sent directly to the employer for review. The date of the check is recorded in the SCR, and the employer completes the Evidenced By and Date Evidenced fields to confirm they have reviewed the findings.
Technically yes, but manual searches are inconsistent, undocumented and difficult to defend at inspection. A structured check through OnlineSCR ensures consistency, compliance and a proper audit trail.
Yes. Current KCSIE guidance is clear — schools must inform shortlisted candidates that online searches may be carried out as part of due diligence checks.
The safeguarding landscape in 2026 is more complex than ever. A DBS check alone cannot give schools the full picture they need to make safe recruitment decisions. Adverse media checks are not about distrust — they are about due diligence and being able to demonstrate to inspectors, governors, and parents that your school takes safer recruitment seriously.
The strongest schools are not waiting. By adopting an adverse media check as part of layered vetting, they are building a proactive safeguarding culture that stands up to inspection.
OnlineSCR provides: