KCSIE Updates: Are Your School’s Filtering and Monitoring Systems Compliant?
Safeguarding has always been the top priority for schools, but the digital aspect of safeguarding is moving faster than ever. The Department for Education’s Keeping Children Safe in Education (KCSIE) guidance has significantly tightened the requirements around IT infrastructure.
It is no longer sufficient to simply have a firewall that blocks “inappropriate” sites. The guidance now explicitly differentiates between Filtering (blocking access to harmful content) and Monitoring (detecting when a user attempts to access or generate harmful content).
The Shift to Active Monitoring
The latest updates place a responsibility on schools to ensure their systems are effective. This means “set and forget” is not an option. Schools need systems that can actively flag concerning behavior, such as:
- Search terms related to self-harm or suicide.
- Language indicative of radicalization or extremism.
- Cyberbullying within school emails or chat platforms.
Crucially, this data cannot just sit in a log file. There must be a process in place where these alerts are reviewed by the Designated Safeguarding Lead (DSL) in a timely manner.
Balancing Safety with Learning
The challenge for IT leads is to implement these robust protections without creating an “over-blocked” environment that hinders learning. If a filtering system is too aggressive, it might block valid health research or history curriculum resources.
How We Support Compliance
At Primary ICT Support, we deploy education-specific filtering solutions that meet the UK Safer Internet Centre standards. Our systems provide granular control, allowing different policies for students and staff, and offering real-time alerts to DSLs when high-risk keywords are detected. We ensure you meet your Prevent Duty obligations while keeping the internet open for learning.