Course Progress (5%)
Lesson 15
Safety in the Digital World
Students learn how to stay safe in digital spaces in the context of bodies, privacy, and relationships. This session covers what to do if someone online makes them uncomfortable, what warning signs look like, and who to tell. It reinforces that consent, body autonomy, and trusted adults matter just as much online as they do in person.

Key Ideas

  • The internet and apps are places where real-world rules about bodies and safety still apply.
  • Your body belongs to you online just as much as it does in person. No one should ever ask you to send a picture of your private parts, and you should never send one, even if someone pressures you.
  • If someone online asks about your body, asks you to keep conversations secret from your parents, or wants to meet you in person, those are warning signs. Tell a trusted adult right away.
  • Consent applies online too. Sharing someone else’s private photos or personal information without their permission is not okay.
  • Screenshots and messages can be saved and shared. Think before you send anything, because once it is sent you cannot take it back.
  • If you see something online that makes you uncomfortable, like pictures of bodies or sexual content, close it and tell a trusted adult. You are not in trouble for seeing it by accident.
  • You can always go to a trusted adult with anything that happens online, no matter what it is. You will not get in trouble for telling.


Vocabulary
TermDefinition
Online safetyKnowing how to protect yourself and others when using the internet, apps, or any digital device.
Private informationDetails about you, your body, your location, or your personal life that you should not share with people you do not know well.
Warning signSomething that tells you a situation might be unsafe or uncomfortable and that you should tell a trusted adult.
ScreenshotA saved image of what is on a screen. Screenshots can be shared with others without your knowledge or permission.