Safer Internet Day offers early childhood education and care services more than an opportunity to acknowledge a date on the calendar — it invites us to pause, reflect, and strengthen how we protect children in an increasingly digital world. In 2026, this day aligned deeply with the strengthened child safety expectations across the National Quality Framework, particularly the updated Element 2.2.3 (Child Safety and Protection) and Element 7.1.2 (Management Systems).
In early childhood, online safety is not about children independently navigating technology. It is about protective behaviours, trusted relationships, respectful and ethical practices, and the systems adults put in place to keep children safe. Every conversation, every consent check before taking a photo, and every clear procedure sends children a powerful message: you are safe, you are listened to, and adults will protect you.
Services that meaningfully embedded Safer Internet Day into everyday practice demonstrated to assessors that child safety was intentional, deeply embedded, and continuously strengthened over time — not reactive, tokenistic, or limited to compliance.
This article explains how services demonstrated Exceeding practice through Safer Internet Day, sharing practical programming ideas and Quality Improvement Plan (QIP) write-ups across each Quality Area, aligned with the three Exceeding themes, to support services in building a strong, genuine and sustainable child safe culture.
