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Our free webinars are available to people working in the children’s education and care sectors and members of the community, including parents and carers. Frontline practitioners who work directly with children in education, childcare, support work, social work, youth justice may find these resources useful to their practice contexts.
Register for a webinar below or visit the Bright Futures Community of Practice to view the past webinars recordings at bright-futures.com.au.
Webinar 1 – The prevalence and characteristics of men in the Australian community who sexually abuse children
Join Professor Michael Salter, Professor of Criminology in the School of Social Sciences at the University of New South Wales, to discuss a global study’s shock findings on the number of Australian men who are sexually attracted to children and teens.
This webinar presents the findings of a representative survey of almost 2000 Australian men regarding their sexual feelings and behaviours towards children. The webinar will discuss the prevalence of online and offline offending amongst men in the community, the characteristics and risk factors associated with offending, and the implications of the study for prevention, early intervention and detection.
Presenter
Professor Michael Salter
Professor of Criminology in the School of Social Sciences at the University of NSW, and the inaugural Director of Childlight UNSW
Webinar 2 – Preventing Harmful Sexual Behaviours in Schools
Join us for the 2nd Bright Futures FREE webinar for 2024 presented by Dr Kjersti Draugedalen, Associate Professor Lesley-Anne Ey and Tim Wong.
The webinar will give an overview of a newly started R&D innovation project in Norway. Through a public health approach to prevention, the project will explore whether focus on comprehensive sexuality education, youth participation, and enhanced interdisciplinary cooperation between schools and services can strengthen teachers’ safeguarding of children and young people in schools.
Presenters
Dr Kjersti Draugedalen
University of South-Eastern Norway
Tim Wong – Psychologist
Associate Professor Lesley-Anne Ey
University of South Australia
Webinar 3 -Responding to sibling sexual abuse – putting research into action
Sibling sexual abuse is perhaps the most common form of intrafamilial sexual harm, yet cases involving sibling sexual abuse can be very challenging for practitioners and agencies, and outcomes for children affected and their families are often suboptimal. This workshop will cover content of two recent publications by the UK based ‘Centre of expertise in child sexual abuse’ written for social workers and other professionals. They outline current knowledge and evidence in the sibling sexual abuse field and look at how that knowledge can be used to inform how we positively support a family’s journey, from identification of harm, safety planning and assessment, through to intervention, case closure and aftercare support. The webinar will also draw on recent research on the lived experiences of adult survivors of sibling sexual abuse and how that can inform child protection decision making and better outcomes for families.
Presenter
Stuart Allardyce
Director at Lucy Faithfull Foundation
Webinar 4 – Contextual Safeguarding: the idea, the implementation and the opportunities
Child protection systems in many countries around the world have been designed on the basis then when a child has been abused, or come to harm, that the responsibility for their protection rests with their parents and carers. Yet cases of exploitation, peer-abuse and street-based violence affecting young people has demonstrated a need to look beyond parents if we want to protect children from the risks they face beyond their front doors. In this webinar Prof. Carlene Firmin from Durham University UK will introduce the idea of Contextual Safeguarding; where it came from and how it has been used to transform the response of child welfare systems in the UK, and beyond, to extra-familial forms of abuse. During the webinar Carlene will share the key features of implementation that have been identified as the approach has been gradually piloted and adopted in different test locations, and will reflect on why leadership from social care and wider child welfare organisations is paramount for protecting children abused beyond their front doors. She will outline opportunities for further development of the idea in Australia and other countries outside the UK, and what she hopes such testing will mean for advocates of the approach in the UK.
Presenter
Professor Carlene Firmin
Webinar 5 – Feel Safe, Be Safe: Protective Strategies for everyday teaching, learning and care for birth to 5 year olds
Goodstart’s Feel Safe, Be Safe: Protective Strategies Kit is an example of emerging and exemplary practice that supports educators and teachers of children aged birth-5 to meaningfully embed protective strategies within everyday teaching, learning and care.
Mixing pedagogy and play, protective strategies empower children with age–appropriate knowledge, strategies, and skills to respond to a range of unsafe situations (including online), understand their bodies, emotions, and early warning signs, set boundaries, and persist in seeking help from a trusted adult. Protective strategies are crucial in promoting personal safety and well-being, they are underpinned by the Universal Protective Behaviours Framework and are predicated on two key themes:
• We all have the right to be safe all of the time
• We can all talk with a trusted adult about anything.
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse highlighted the importance of providing children with access to protective strategies to reduce the risk of child sexual abuse or harm. Protective strategies are woven throughout the vision, principles, practices and learning outcomes of the Early Years Learning Framework V2.0, and central to the National Principles for Child Safe Organizations and State-based Child-Safe Standards.
Presenters
Marie Stuart
Goodstart Early Learning Social Inclusion Coordinator, Queensland
Sara Evans
Goodstart Early Learning National Lead Safeguarding Children
Webinar 6 – Keeping the Brain in Mind: Treating neurodiverse youth engaged in problematic sexual behavior
Attending to and understanding how neurodevelopmental issues can contribute to the emergence of sexual behavior problems in children not only assists in shaping our assessment and treatment interventions, but it can also dissuade us from over-pathologizing the motivations and intentions of the children who present with these behavioral issues.
This webinar will focus on highlighting the common principles and obstacles associated with the effective assessment and treatment of neurodiverse youth exhibiting problematic sexual behaviors while identifying specific treatment needs and treatment interventions for some of the different constellations of social, emotional, and cognitive difficulties with which these youth may present.
Presenter
Kevin Creeden
Director of Assessment and Research at the Whitney Academy in East Freetown, MA
Webinar 7 –
Webinar overview coming soon…
Presenter
Professor Jeremy Prichard
Director of the Tasmania Law Reform Institute
Webinar 8 –
Webinar overview coming soon…
Presenters
Associate Professor Nadine McKillop
Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit
Dr Susan Rayment-McHugh
Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit
Dr Lara Christensen
Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit
Webinar 9 –
Webinar overview coming soon…
Presenters
Deanne Carson
Director, Body Safe Australia
Jane Gilmour – Author
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