How can schools preserve child protection evidence more safely?
Schools can preserve evidence by attaching it to the correct safeguarding case, limiting access, maintaining activity history, and keeping notes, uploads, and decisions together.
Why evidence context matters
Evidence is more useful when it stays connected to the original concern, case notes, decisions, and follow-up actions.
Common evidence types
Schools may need to preserve screenshots, documents, written notes, messages, forms, or other relevant files connected to safeguarding concerns.
What a controlled workflow supports
A controlled workflow helps safeguarding users upload evidence, keep it in the right case, and reduce reliance on informal storage locations.
What to look for
- Case-linked uploads
- Role-based evidence access
- Clear activity history
- Review and reporting support
- Secure evidence handling
Next step
Use this guide to review whether your current safeguarding process keeps reports, evidence, permissions, and accountability connected in one place.