The First Line of Protection

Cyber Education for Parents

Today, your child’s playground isn’t just the backyard—it’s the internet. Technology inspires learning and creativity, but it also brings risks like predators, cyberbullying, and grooming.

The good news? You don’t need to be a tech expert to protect your child—you just need the right guidance.

Our CyberEducation for Parents program gives you the tools, knowledge, and confidence to keep your family safe online. You’ll learn how to:

  • Recognize how predators operate on everyday apps and games
  • Spot early warning signs of manipulation
  • Create a digital safety plan for your family
  • Start open, empowering conversations with your child

Your child’s safety starts with your awareness. Don’t wait for a crisis—be the shield your child doesn’t even know they need.

Knowledge is your superpower and what you know can save your child online

DO NOT SHARE!

Cyber Education for Parents

Do Not Share, Rethinking Online Safety for Kids

Protecting children online starts with what we post. Even small details—like school logos or consistent routines—can reveal far more than we think.

Covering a child’s face with an emoji isn’t enough. Backgrounds, clothing, and posting patterns can still expose identity and location.

4 things never to share online about children:

1. Full Names

Makes it easier for strangers to search or approach.

2. School Uniforms

Logos and colours reveal daily whereabouts.

3. Addresses & Landmarks

Geotags and street signs pinpoint location.

4. Routines

Regular posts show patterns predators can exploit.

True safety means limiting the digital trail. Think before you post—because every detail matters.

Digital safety is Physical safety

Children Should not use Roblox

Why Parents Should Think Twice About Roblox?

Roblox may look fun, but it comes with real risks for kids. Even with new safety updates, no online platform can guarantee 100% protection.

Here are 3 main reasons to be careful:

1. Inappropriate Content & Chats
Kids can still see language, sexual content, or violent roleplay created by other users.

2. Stranger Danger & Online Predators
Children can interact with strangers worldwide. Some adults may try to groom kids by pretending to be peers.

3. Addiction & Unsafe Spending
Games are highly engaging and can be addictive. Kids may also be pressured to spend money on in-game items or fall for scams.

Bottom line: Safety tools help, but nothing replaces active parental guidance and awareness.