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✓ Mapped to the UK National Curriculum✓ Trusted by parents, teachers & schools✓ Safe, ad-free space for children✓ EYFS to GCSE — every stage covered✓ Made by qualified UK teachers✓ Mapped to the UK National Curriculum✓ Trusted by parents, teachers & schools✓ Safe, ad-free space for children✓ EYFS to GCSE — every stage covered✓ Made by qualified UK teachers
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A 7-slide friendly introduction to the emotional and safety side of KS1 PSHE. Slides 1–3 build emotional vocabulary and self-regulation strategies (the breathing exercise is the standard “smell-the-flower, blow-out-the-candle” used in primary schools). Slide 4 introduces the idea of a “trusted grown-up”. Slide 5 covers the crucial KS1 distinction between secrets (which should never be kept if they make you feel bad) and surprises (which are short, happy, and end with a reveal).

Slide 6 introduces basic online safety. Slide 7 closes with the “5 finger help-hand” — five trusted people to write down. Throughout: NEVER keep a secret if it makes you feel worried.

A ten-question quiz covering the full KS1 PSHE/RSE breadth — emotional wellbeing, what makes a good friend, family diversity, the secrets-vs-surprises distinction, basic online safety, healthy habits, and the absolute rule about telling a trusted grown-up.

Best taken after the e-learning lesson and worksheet. Designed to reinforce the safe behaviours — every question that mentions “tell a grown-up” has that as the correct answer.

A planning companion for KS1 PSHE/RSE. Maps the pack to the statutory DfE 2020 (and 2025 update) RSHE guidance, clarifies what is and isn’t covered at KS1 (no sex education; the changing adolescent body is KS2), explains parental withdrawal rights (which apply only to sex education at primary — relationships and health education cannot be withdrawn from), and provides a 6-lesson scheme.

Most importantly: a clear disclosure procedure for what to do if a pupil discloses something during a PSHE lesson — including the absolute rule that you cannot keep a child’s safeguarding disclosure confidential and must tell the school’s DSL the same day.