Safer Internet Day - An Internet We Can Trust
PCS - Keeping safe online: interactive Q&A for Safer Internet Day 2021
Online Safety tips from Connect Safely.
Online Safety Tips
Safer Internet Day: Social Media Pack
UK Safer Internet Centre
This pack includes some key things to help you get involved on social media:
- social media post to share now and a tweet to schedule for 8am on Safer Internet Day
- posts for the 9th of February
- images to share on social media
- ways to engage in the wider social media campaign, including the offline template
I share responsibly so I don’t spread false information
Lesson Plans
Middle School Lesson Plan
Elementary School Lesson Plan
Connect with the SID Committees in your country!
Safer Internet Day - Your Country
On Tuesday, 9 February 2021, we will celebrate the 18th edition of Safer Internet Day with actions taking place right across the globe.
With a theme once again of "Together for a better internet", the day calls upon all stakeholders to join together to make the internet a safer and better place for all, and especially for children and young people.
Over the years, Safer Internet Day has become a landmark event in the online safety calendar. Starting as an initiative of the EU SafeBorders project in 2004 and taken up by the Insafe network as one of its earliest actions in 2005, Safer Internet Day has grown beyond its traditional geographic zone and is now celebrated in approximately 170 countries worldwide.
Safer Internet Day 2021 celebrates the amazing range of information and opportunities online, and its potential to inform, connect and inspire us, whilst also looking at how young people can separate fact from fiction.
The campaign focuses on how we can know what to trust online, supporting young people to question, challenge and change the online world. It will explore how influence, persuasion and manipulation can appear online and why this may happen. It will also look at the emotional impact navigating a misleading online world can have on young people and why it is important to create a supportive, critical and questioning culture online that encourages debate and discussion. We want to give young people the skills to support one another and the strategies to spot and speak out against harmful and misleading content online.