Protecting Your Child from Online Bullying
Prevent, detect, and respond — with confidence
Spot the signs, save the evidence, contact the right people. Respond confidently in the first 24 hours of any incident.
Cyberbullying is the most frequently reported online harm facing children and young people in the UK today. Yet most parents feel woefully unprepared to detect it, respond to it, or support a child who is living through it. This course changes that. Whether your child is being bullied, is the bully, or is a bystander, you will finish this course knowing exactly what to do: how to document evidence, report to platforms and schools, support your child emotionally, and build the long-term resilience that makes the difference between surviving cyberbullying and being defined by it.
One-time payment. Lifetime access.
Enrol NowWhat You Will Learn
Who This Course Is For
Parents of children aged 7–18
Course Curriculum
Every module follows the 8-stage INTERACT learning model
Understanding Online Bullying
What it actually is, how it works, and why it hits differently than playground bullying
Recognising the Signs
The behavioural changes that signal cyberbullying — and why most children don't tell their parents
What to Do When It Happens
Your step-by-step response protocol — from the first disclosure to school involvement and beyond
When Your Child Is the Bully
The conversation you hope to never have — and how to have it in a way that leads to change
Building Resilience and Prevention
The long game: upstander education, digital empathy, and the emotional resilience that protects your child for life
Built by Experts. Trusted by Parents.
Every course is developed by child safety specialists and education professionals. Content is aligned with NCSC guidance and updated as the digital landscape evolves.
Statutory alignment
Mapped to KCSiE 2025: Annex B (p.164), Paragraph 187, Paragraph 135
Direct alignment with the school's preventing-bullying duty. Covers cyber-bullying, the platforms it occurs on and the response framework.
See the full alignment matrix →