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Why not look through this section for skill and knowledge development opportunities.
Resources
The GB Rowing Team is the high performance arm of British Rowing. Rowing is the nation’s most continuously successful Olympic sport, having won a gold medal in every Olympic Games since 1984, and has won six Paralympic golds since the sport was introduced to the Paralympic Games programme in 2008.
GB Rowing Team
British Rowing is committed to ongoing development and provision of policies, best practice guidance and central support towards Safeguarding Children, Young People and Adults with care and support needs.
For information about Safeguarding training read Safeguarding Handbook 1, Section 6 (below) and go to the Safeguarding Workshop List.
Got a question? Check out our frequently asked questions below, or contact us at [email protected]
Report A Concern
In pursuit of our commitment to promoting a safe and enjoyable environment in rowing, British Rowing’s Safeguarding Strategy sets out our vision to be among the leading National Governing Bodies of sport by 2025, showcasing the highest standards in safeguarding. We will ensure that our duty of care to children, young adults and adults at risk is firmly embedded at the heart of rowing.
Our areas of focus include: Defining safeguarding, early intervention, guiding best practice, robust case management, and commitment to ongoing monitoring and review.
DOWNLOAD THE SAFEGUARDING STRATEGY
Other relevant policies that can be found on the Policies and Guidance webpage include:
Please have a read of this document, which summarises all the changes we’ve made to our previous guidance notes.
The Club Welfare Officer
Handbook 1 is the perfect tool for any Club Welfare Officer to get to grips with their role, and to understand how they can ensure their club takes Safeguarding seriously. In this handbook, you’ll find guidance on:
Handling Concerns
Handbook 2 will help people understand all about handling concerns, and what to do if a child or adult with care and support needs discloses a concern to you. In this handbook, you’ll find guidance on:
Club, Training and Competition Guidance
Handbook 3 is a handy guide for Coaches, as well as Club Welfare Officers, to understand the safeguarding needs of children and adults with care and support needs for training and competition. In this handbook, you’ll find guidance on:
Safety in the Digital World
Handbook 4 is for anyone who is responsible for organising or delivering online activity at their club, as well as people responsible for photography and videography in the club or during events. In this handbook, you’ll find guidance on:
There are lots of training opportunities available for anyone to carry out and full details of what training is required for specific roles are outlined in section 6 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 1.
This is online training available through our education platform, RowHow and we recommend everyone in rowing complete it whether you are a rower, cox, adult, child, coach, volunteer, official, or even parent. You just need a ClubHub account and you can access it here. Please note this does not fulfil the requirements for those undertaking a coaching qualification or carrying out the role of welfare officer, read on for the requisite training for those roles!
UK Coaching deliver Safeguarding and Protecting Children workshops which are tutor-led and delivered online or in person. These workshops are required for anyone who is working with children, completing a coaching qualification, or taking on the role of welfare officer. Whilst there are workshops available from other providers we would encourage you to undergo sport-specific safeguarding and protecting children workshops so the context of your training is rooted in the sporting environment.
If you don’t coach or support children in sport, or you are a welfare officer in a club without children, then it is highly recommended you complete the UK Coaching Safeguarding Adults online learning. This training is not an alternative to the Safeguarding and Protecting Children workshop (if you are working towards a coaching qualification) but it will enable you to support the welfare of all adults in your environment and recognise the signs of abuse or poor practice.
Time to Listen is specifically for welfare officers (once they have completed the Safeguarding and Protecting Children training) to provide you with greater understanding of your role in the safeguarding environment. CPSU offer multi-sport workshops delivered by third parties and a list of opportunities are available here.
Safeguarding Leaflet for Junior Rowers
Who is my club welfare officer
Guide to Understanding our Safeguarding Policy
Weighing Rowers and Coxes Guidance
The Club Welfare Officer is the individual at your club who is responsible for promoting Safeguarding and the welfare of children and adults. Every club affiliated with British Rowing must have a Club Welfare Officer, so ask your club staff who this is. Alternatively, you can contact British Rowing’s Lead Safeguarding Officer.
Only individuals who are in “regulated activity” require a DBS check. Regulated Activity involves teaching, training, instructing, caring for, or supervising children, or providing guidance on their advice/wellbeing. It must also happen frequently (once a week or more) or happen intensively (on four or more days in 30 days, or overnight (02:00-06:00).
For more information on what regulated activity is, and whether you need a DBS check, please visit Section 7 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 1 – the Club Welfare Officer.
When a club hires new members of coaches, volunteers and employees, this must be carried out in line with our Safer Recruitment guidance, which can be found in section 4 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 1 – the Club Welfare Officer. The key recommendations include gathering suitable references and ensuring that individuals are adequately trained and vetted to carry out their roles safely.
To make your club safer, the best thing you can do is make sure everybody at the club knows who the Club Welfare Officer is. To do this, you can visit our Safeguarding page and download the Club Welfare Officer poster pack, and the Safeguarding leaflet for junior rowers. Another vital step to making your club safe is ensuring your club has proper safeguarding policies and procedures in place.
Every affiliated club must adopt the British Rowing Safeguarding Children and Young People policy and the British Rowing Safeguarding Adults at Risk policy. We also recommend clubs adopt our Online Safety and Social Media Policy, our Whistleblowing Policy and our Anti-Bullying Policy. All of these policies can be found in our Safeguarding Handbooks.
As soon as you see or hear something that isn’t quite right, you must report this concern to either the Club Welfare Officer or British Rowing’s Lead Safeguarding Officer. Everyone has a responsibility to report any concerns they may have. Doing nothing is not an option.
To find out more about what abuse towards children and adults at risk looks like, read sections 2.3 and 2.4 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 2 – Handling concerns. It is not up to you to decide if abuse is happening or has happened. If you feel that whatever happened isn’t right, then report this.
If you’re a child, and you have been abused, you can call the NSPCC hotline on 0808 800 5000, or Childline on 0800 1111. You can also contact the police on 999 in the event of an emergency, or 101. If you’re an adult at risk, you can also call the Hourglass helpline on 0808 808 8141, or contact your local council, to contact the Adult Safeguarding coordinator.
British Rowing also offers further resources to support you.
If you receive concerns that arose outside of rowing, such as at a school, or a family home, they must still be reported, either to your Club Welfare Officer, British Rowing’s Lead Safeguarding Officer, or the emergency services. For British Rowing’s safeguarding reporting structure, please refer to appendix 2 and 3 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 2 – Handling concerns.
No. Any aggressive behaviour from a coach, towards a child or adult, should be reported to the Club Welfare Officer, or British Rowing’s Lead Safeguarding Officer. If coaches shout at children or adults at risk, this could be considered bullying or emotional abuse. For more guidance on how coaches should manage challenging behaviour, refer to section 4 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 3 – Club, training, and competition guidance.
Children are allowed to row, or cox, in a boat with an adult, as long as there is a DBS checked adult supervising the boat. The child cannot go out in the boat, without being supervised by at least two adults, one of which should be in the boat, and one of which should have a DBS check.
No. At no point should a child be left unsupervised. If a child is sculling, they should only be doing so whilst supervised by a DBS checked coach, with a second adult available.
Any individual working in regulated activity must attend a tutor-led safeguarding workshop, which can be delivered online. Any other individual in rowing is free to carry out any safeguarding training they feel appropriate. For more information on the Safeguarding training requirements, please see section 6 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 1 – the Club Welfare Officer.
Under no circumstances, barring an emergency, can coaches be alone in a car, or any form of transport, with a child. If a coach is driving a child to train, this must have been discussed with the parent or carer beforehand, as an absolute last resort, and at least one other person must be in the car. For more information on this, please see section 8 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 3 – Club, training, and competition guidance.
Yes, providing that the pictures were taken following consent by both the children and the children’s parents or carers. You must ensure that you have permission to take the pictures and that you have informed the child and parent/carer what will happen to the picture once it has been taken. For more guidance, please read our Photography and Use of Imagery guidance, in section 1 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 4 – Safety in the digital world.
Yes, your child can engage in group chats. As long as your child is not talking to their coach online, in a 1:1 capacity, this is acceptable. We require all communication between children and coaches to either have the parent/carer included or other rowers. For more information, please see section 3 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 4 – Safety in the digital world.
Yes, you can video junior rowers. However, consent for this must be obtained from both the child and their parent/carer. You must explain to both parties in full what the purpose of the video is, who it will be shared with, how long it will be stored for and how you will store it. For more information, please see section 1 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 4 – Safety in the digital world.
Clubs have a variety of ways they can communicate with parents and juniors, such as club newsletters, emails, groups on social media and group chats, such as WhatsApp. The most important thing clubs must do is to read and adopt the guidance in British Rowing’s Online Safety and Social Media policy, which can be found in section 3 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 4 – Safety in the digital world.
If your club is active online, then it is important to adopt British Rowing’s Online Safety and Social Media Policy. It is also very important to have safeguards in place, such as having staff monitoring online content on your website, support procedures in place for children and adults and ways to report offensive behaviour and conduct. For more information on staying safe online, please visit section 4 of British Rowing’s Safeguarding Handbook 4 – Safety in the digital world.