Supporting your preschooler with online games

About this resource

This video animation highlights the importance of parents and carers taking an active role in supporting young children to develop safe online habits.

Age range for this resource

For parents, carers, and educators of young children aged 3 to 5 years.

Goal of this resource

To foster young children’s sense of wellbeing and online safety.

To provide young children with strategies, habits, and behaviours for maintaining their own safety when using online environments.

How might educators use this resource?

Watch this video animation and reflect on how young children learn about online games. Who do children interact with to find out about online games that interest them? Who do children ask for help to play online games safely? Consider having a discussion with children in your service about online games they like to play.

How might families use this resource?

Your child might be interested in playing online games for fun and entertainment. View this short video animation to learn strategies about how best to support your child to engage with online games safely.

How might organisations use this resource?

In your organisation’s regular communication to families, provide a link to this short video animation. Introduce the video with a short statement such as: ‘This animated video can provide you with practical strategies for supporting your child’s ability to engage in online games safely.’

What learning might we see?

Parents and carers understanding the importance of actively keeping young children safe online through adopting strategies for online safety.

Parents, carers, and educators highlighting the importance of young children asking adults for help when required.

Young children and families engaging with online games in fun, safe, and responsible ways.

Practices

Supervising

Children use internet-connected technologies with filters and passwords applied and always with active adult supervision.

Learn more about Practices

Area

Citizenship

Citizenship in digital contexts recognises that young children are active participants in their communities now and into the future. As citizens, young children respect their own rights and those of other people, and develop an appreciation for cultural, racial, gender, and religious diversity. Digital rights, digital privacy, online safety, and cyber-safety education provide a foundation for early citizenship in digital contexts.

Learn more about Citizenship

Connection to relevant standards

Belonging, Being, and Becoming: The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia V2.0 (Australian Government Department of Education, 2022)
Outcome 1: Children have a strong sense of identity

Children feel safe, secure, and supported (e.g., Children establish and maintain respectful, trusting relationships with other children and educators).

Children develop their emerging autonomy, inter-dependence, resilience, and agency (e.g., Educators provide children with strategies to make informed choices about their actions, interactions, and behaviours).

Children develop knowledgeable, confident self-identities and a positive sense of self-worth (e.g., Educators support children to identify and assess risks in play and learning and to cope with the unexpected).

Children learn to interact in relation to others with care, empathy, and respect (e.g., Children recognise safe and unsafe situations; Children identify trusted adults and friends; Educators support children to learn about and recognise safe and unsafe situations).

Outcome 2: Children are connected with and contribute to their world

Children develop a sense of connectedness to groups and communities and an understanding of their reciprocal rights and responsibilities as active and informed citizens (e.g., Educators provide opportunities for children to investigate ideas, complex concepts, and ethical issues that are relevant to their lives and their local communities).

Outcome 3: Children have a strong sense of wellbeing

Children become strong in their social, emotional, and mental wellbeing (e.g., Educators discuss and model appropriate use of digital technologies and discuss how to keep children safe online with children and families; Educators update their own learning of digital and cyber safety for children).

Children are aware of and develop strategies to support their own mental and physical health and personal safety (e.g., Educators learn about e-safety for children and embed and model safe digital practices).

Outcome 4: Children are confident and involved learners

Children resource their own learning through connecting with people, place, technologies, and natural and processed materials (e.g., Educators select and introduce appropriate tools, technologies, and media and provide the skills, knowledge, and techniques to enhance children’s learning; Educators develop their skills and knowledge with digital technologies and media in their curriculum to use them confidently with children).

Outcome 5: Children are effective communicators

Children engage with a range of texts and gain meaning from these texts (e.g., Children view and listen to printed, visual, and multimedia texts and respond with relevant gestures, actions, comments, and/or questions).

Children express ideas and make meaning using a range of media (e.g., Children view, listen and respond to simple printed, visual, and multimedia texts or music and express how it makes them feel).

Children use digital technologies and media to access information, investigate ideas, and represent their thinking (e.g., Educators teach children critical reflection skills and encourage them to evaluate the quality and trustworthiness of information sources; Educators have opportunities to develop their own knowledge and understanding of appropriate digital technology use and safety with children and families).

National Quality Standard (Australian Children’s Education and Care Quality Authority, 2019)

Quality Area 1: Educational program and practice (e.g., Educators are deliberate, purposeful, and thoughtful in their decisions and actions; Each child’s agency is promoted, enabling them to make choices and decisions that influence events and their world).

Quality Area 2: Children’s health and safety (e.g., Each child’s wellbeing and comfort is provided for, including appropriate opportunities to meet each child’s need for sleep, rest, and relaxation; At all times, reasonable precautions and adequate supervision ensure children are protected from harm and hazard).

Quality Area 5: Relationships with children (e.g., Responsive and meaningful interactions build trusting relationships which engage and support each child to feel secure, confident, and included; The dignity and rights of every child are maintained).

Quality Area 6: Collaborative partnerships with families and communities (e.g., Current information is available to families about the service and relevant community services and resources to support parenting and family wellbeing).

National Principles for Child Safe Organisations (Australian Human Rights Commission, 2018)

Principle 1: Child safety and wellbeing is embedded in organisational leadership, governance, and culture.

Principle 2: Children and young people are informed about their rights, participate in decisions affecting them, and are taken seriously.

Principle 3: Families and communities are informed and involved in promoting child safety and wellbeing.

Principle 5: People working with children and young people are suitable and supported to reflect child safety and wellbeing values in practice.

Principle 7: Staff and volunteers are equipped with the knowledge, skills, and awareness to keep children and young people safe through ongoing education and training.

Principle 8: Physical and online environments promote safety and wellbeing while minimising the opportunity for children and young people to be harmed.

Explore More

If these ideas are new to you, explore these related resources:

The wooden internet

This article describes how the use of wooden pretend devices (phones, laptops, tablets, Wi-fi routers) in play-based learning can support children’s understanding of the internet and provide valuable opportunities for adults to model and discuss online safety with children.

eSafety Early Years Parent Resources

These articles, activities, and videos explore how parents and carers can support young children to have safe and enjoyable experiences online.

For more ideas, explore these related resources:

Storytelling for a connected childhood

This article invites parents, carers, and educators to use stories to engage children and build their understanding about online safety.

Jack Changes the Game

This picture book supports parents, carers, and educators to discuss issues with children around online safety.

If you would like to read some research, explore these related resources:

Griffith, S. F., Hart, K. C., Mavrakis, A. A., & Bagner, D. M. (2022). Making the best of app use: The impact of parent-child co-use of interactive media on children’s learning in the US. Journal of Children and Media, 16(2), 271–287. https://doi.org/10.1080/17482798.2021.1970599

Musick, G., Freeman, G., & McNeese, N. J. (2021). Gaming as family time: Digital game co-play in modern parent-child relationships. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 5, 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1145/347467

The Resource

Supporting your preschooler with online games

Developed in collaboration with Alannah & Madeleine Foundation, the Australian Federal Police, the eSafety Commissioner, and Raising Children Network, this video animation (1.32 minutes duration) explores how parents and carers can take an active role in supporting young children to develop safe online habits.

Watch the video