Is summer’s highest-consequence risks: water and outdoor environments? It could be if proper safety protocols aren't created and followed.
- How do you assess water risk beyond “can they swim?”
- What are supervision standards for pools, beaches, and open water?
- How do you safely plan for water sports and outdoor adventure activities?
- Weather monitoring and decision-making are important factors; and
- What good emergency readiness looks like when you’re outside, remote, and time-critical.
What is water safety? Knowing how to prevent injuries and drowning in, on, and around water by understanding risks, following rules (like never swimming alone), using safety gear (life jackets), recognising dangers (currents, depth), supervising children closely, and knowing basic rescue skills (float, call for help)
Assuming “it’s supervised” is a control. Supervision needs structure, roles, and a plan for what happens when visibility breaks.
Yes — because you’re managing safeguarding alongside public risk: strangers, crowds, and reduced control of boundaries.
Speed of escalation. A child can get into difficulty silently and quickly. Your controls must reduce time-to-notice and time-to-act.
Often, yes — because conditions change and public access reduces control. But pools can still be high-risk if supervision is weak or rules aren’t enforced.
Use clear boundaries, structured supervision, and rules that don’t rely on self-assessment. Confidence isn’t competence.
Facts, timeline, who responded, what actions were taken, and what you’ll change next time — stored in digital safeguarding records.
Keep records of qualifications/licensing, insurance, risk assessments, ratios, and safeguarding reporting routes — ideally centralised in safeguarding software.