Generation Next Blog

September 2019

Be part of National Child Protection Week (1 – 7 September)

By |2020-03-09T11:29:22+11:00September 2nd, 2019|Categories: Uncategorized|

Children do best when life is on an even keel and their parents have the support they need. By being kind to parents, supporting family-friendly policies, and building connected communities, we’re all helping to give Australia’s children the best start in life. National Child Protection Week is all about celebrating the many ways – big [...]

Mental Health and Wellbeing of Young People seminars wrapped for 2019, with spectacular Melbourne finish

By |2020-03-09T11:29:22+11:00September 2nd, 2019|Categories: Uncategorized|

Over 950 parents, professionals and Victorians of all walks of life flocked to Melbourne last Friday to take part in our Melbourne Mental Health and Wellbeing of Young People seminar. The all-day event included presentations on a diverse range of topics that are currently critical to youth wellbeing. A new addition for the Melbourne seminar [...]

Children can be exposed to sexual predators online, so how can parents teach them to be safe?

By |2020-03-09T11:29:22+11:00September 2nd, 2019|Categories: Cybersafety|Tags: , , , |

Many teenagers use mobile phones and social media almost constantly. And children are gaining access to these devices and platforms at increasingly younger ages. This is a challenge for parents who need to keep up with their children’s use, the evolution of devices, and how this changes how they have to parent. Studies show parents [...]

The Imagination Declaration: young Indigenous Australians want to be heard – but will we listen?

By |2019-09-02T12:00:26+10:00September 2nd, 2019|Categories: Uncategorized|Tags: , , , , , |

When you think of an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander kid, or in fact any kid, imagine what’s possible. Don’t define us through the lens of disadvantage […] Expect the best of us. – Excerpt from the Imagination Declaration, August 2019. A group of school students from across Australia have just shown what real leadership [...]

Self-Care September Strategies

By |2019-10-04T11:14:23+10:00September 1st, 2019|Categories: Uncategorized|Tags: , , , , , |

In 2019, headspace is promoting a number of ‘Self-Care September’ strategies and approaches for Australian school staff. These activities are aimed at strengthening wellbeing, resilience, engagement, connection, help seeking, and early access to support. Download the resource here>>

August 2019

Youth with a disability face more risk online

By |2021-02-26T17:34:01+11:00August 26th, 2019|Categories: Bullying, Cybersafety, Disability, Technology|Tags: , , , |

Increased digital participation has provided many positives for young people with disabilities, but greater potential risks can also be found lurking online for those who live with a disability, according to latest research from the Office of the eSafety Commissioner. The potential risks – such as exposure to inappropriate content, excessive use, and image-based abuse [...]

Identifying and stopping grooming for abuse

By |2019-08-26T13:17:10+10:00August 26th, 2019|Categories: Cybersafety, Grooming, Sexual Assault|Tags: , , , |

We have never been more aware of the prevalence of child sexual abuse, but unfortunately this has yet to translate into a reduction of new cases. How can parents keep their children safe without being overwhelmed by paranoia? According to child safety experts, it comes down to awareness of 'grooming'. Predators will take various, but [...]

Fitness trackers and eating disorders – is there a link?

By |2021-03-04T15:30:28+11:00August 26th, 2019|Categories: Eating Disorders, Technology|Tags: , , , , |

Fitness and health tracking devices are becoming increasingly popular and a huge variety of wearable tech and apps now exist. Indeed, many smartphones and smart watches now come primed and ready to track our activity, sleep and nutrition. Research has for a long time highlighted how monitoring behaviours can help to lead to positive changes [...]

Ode to the poem: why memorising poetry still matters for human connection

By |2019-08-26T13:51:06+10:00August 20th, 2019|Categories: Uncategorized|Tags: , , , |

Memorising poetry was once common in classrooms. But it has, for the most part, gone out of style. There are good reasons for this. Memorisation can clash with creativity and analytical thought. Rote learning can be seen as mindless, drone-like, something done without really thinking about why we’re doing it and what the thing we [...]

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