Child Safety Resources
Every child deserves a safe future.
“NCMEC leads the fight against abduction, abuse, and exploitation - because every child deserves a safe childhood. You can contact the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children 24 hours a day at 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678).”
HOW TO REPORT
“Thorn is part of a large ecosystem of people, companies, organizations and governments working to protect kids from sexual exploitation. To fully address these crimes, we must build and maintain an understanding of the complex life cycle of abuse. Deep understanding allows for specific action to change lives.”
How Educators Can Help
Note: Please do not share or distribute child sexual abuse material (CSAM), even in an attempt to report it.
Not only is it illegal, but it spreads the content across the internet, further victimizing the child and making removal more difficult.
Learn The Warning Signs
Perpetrators of sexual abuse are anywhere and everywhere.
Perpetrators of child sexual abuse are not those scary men who lurk around playgrounds looking for opportunities. In fact, according to the Crimes Against Children Research Center, 90% of children who are sexually abused know their perpetrator.
There are things that almost all perpetrators have in common: they often use certain behaviors to groom a child for abuse. These behaviors are methodical, subtle, gradual, and escalating (meaning they intensify as time goes by). We typically refer to these as grooming behaviors.
While this might be frightening to think about, knowing these grooming patterns will help you to know how to identify grooming behavior, strengthen your parenting intuition, and help significantly lower the risk of your child being sexually abused and recognize signs of grooming behavior.
They are charismatic everyday people who earn the trust of others. They could be a staff member at your child’s school; they could be your child’s coach or music instructor; they could be at your church; they could be the nanny; they could be your very own family member.
Six common grooming behaviors that every educator needs to know
How does TGWS INC help?
Abuse happens in many forms; grooming is such a widespread phenomenon, that there has to be extra tools, resources, and help offered to those spotting and tackling this issue. The deeper your understanding of how grooming occurs, the more you can spot, report, and protect.