We deliver specialist workshops, staff training and parent programmes that build real digital resilience — not just compliance. Used by PSHE leads, DSLs and senior leaders across England.
Trusted by schools & Youth organisations across the UK























In-school or virtual. Available across the UK.
Specialist-led sessions for Years 7–13 covering online misogyny, AI deepfakes, harmful influencers, consent and digital boundaries. Each session includes structured group tasks, anonymous impact measures and a post-workshop report for Ofsted evidence.
Modular INSET training covering: interpreting digital signals & online language, harmful online ideologies, the manosphere & incels, and AI companions in the classroom. Builds consistent safeguarding judgement across your whole team.
Practical evening sessions that mirror the language and frameworks used in student workshops — helping parents understand the digital environments their children navigate and have confident conversations at home.
Download the Schools Pack — curriculum overview, module descriptions, full pricing and a sample impact report. Workshops starting from £3 per pupil for a standard year group and eligible for Pupil Premium funding.
No procurement labyrinth. Most schools are booked and confirmed within a week.
Tell us your year groups, priorities and any upcoming INSET days. No prep required on your side.
We'll propose the right combination of student workshops, staff training and parent sessions for your school.
You'll get a full proposal the next day — itemised, no hidden costs, with flexible scheduling options.
✓ Meets the RSHE 2026 evidenced intervention threshold · A single workshop covers an entire year group and generates an Ofsted-ready impact report · Straightforward to justify as targeted, evidenced Pupil Premium spend
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Students are generating intimate images of classmates using freely available AI tools. Most schools’ safeguarding policies don’t cover this yet.
AI Deepfakes in Schools — a DSL guide →The updated framework names online misogyny, deepfakes and digital harms explicitly. Tick-box assemblies won’t meet it.
What RSHE 2026 means for your school →Not every student has the same support at home. For many, the PSHE lesson is the only place online harms get named and challenged. That’s a responsibility worth taking seriously.
The equity case for online safety →15 minutes. We'll find the right fit and follow up with a clear quote.