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Safeguarding training in your church: how to do it properly

Mandatory, traceable, evidenced — and still human. A practical playbook for DSLs and trustees.

The Mindery Team7 min read
Illustration of cupped hands sheltering a flame with a shield motif.

Safeguarding in a UK church is non-negotiable, time-bound, and audited. It is also one of the few areas of church life where doing it badly carries criminal, civil, and pastoral consequences in the same breath. The aim is not perfection; the aim is a credible, evidenced loop.

AssignTrainAssessEvidenceRenew
Safeguarding is a closed loop. A gap anywhere breaks the chain.

What "doing it properly" actually means

Assign

Every role — paid or volunteer — should have a named training requirement appropriate to its level of contact. Welcome team, children's workers, youth leaders, pastoral visitors, trustees: each tier has its own expectation set by your denomination or charity policy.

Train

Use a recognised training provider — your diocesan office, denominational scheme, or an established national safeguarding body. Don't write your own. Don't shorten it. Don't substitute "we had a chat about it".

Assess

A short, honest assessment at the end matters. Not because the questions are hard, but because completion without comprehension is the failure mode you most want to catch.

Evidence

Time-stamped, named, exportable. A trustee should be able to ask, on a Tuesday, "how many of our children's workers are in-date on Level 2?" — and have an answer before the kettle boils.

Renew

Most safeguarding training has a 3-year shelf life. Renewals must be automatic. Manual reminders fail. The DSL is not your reminder system.

The most common failure

It is rarely a refusal to do the training. It is the loss of the record. Someone trained, the email arrived, the certificate sat in a folder, the staff member left, the folder went with them. Three years later, nobody can prove who did what.

The fix is structural, not behavioural: the system, not the person, owns the record.