Mini vic.gov.au

This is a low bandwidth version of vic.gov.au. Contents may not be up to date. © Copyright State Government of Victoria

Culturally safe environments

Guidance on Child Safe Standard 1: Establish a culturally safe environment in which the diverse and unique identities and experiences of Aboriginal children and young people are respected and valued.

Schools

To comply with Child Safe Standard 1, schools must encourage and actively support a child or student’s ability to express their culture and enjoy their cultural rights.

On this page

All references to ‘schools’ in this guidance include school boarding premises.

Cultural safety

This standard requires schools to make sure Aboriginal children and young people feel safe.

This guidance applies to all schools, even if there are no students who have identified themselves as Aboriginal.

The term ‘Aboriginal’ includes Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. It is important to be respectful of how individual children, students, their families and community refer to themselves and use appropriate language.

Cultural safety includes being provided with a safe, nurturing and positive environment where Aboriginal children:

Benefits of cultural safety

Being able to express their culture makes Aboriginal children stronger and safer. Aboriginal children and young people who don’t feel safe being themselves and expressing their individuality may be less willing to report abuse.

Providing safe environments for children has positive, lifelong impacts that cannot be underestimated. Cultural safety is a key dimension of safety for Aboriginal children.

Key elements of cultural safety

Open all

Identifying as Aboriginal is one part of a child or young person’s identity. Like everyone, Aboriginal people have different life experiences and characteristics. Schools must recognise that each person is unique with their own characteristics, strengths and challenges.

Culture and identity are linked. By supporting Aboriginal children to feel strong in their identity schools also help them enjoy their cultural rights.

Australia’s colonial history has caused significant trauma and hurt that individuals, families and communities still feel today. However, Aboriginal communities have a long history of resilience and growth in the face of adversity and trauma. Schools should show respect for the deep resilience of Victorian Aboriginal communities.

Making your school culturally safe means taking the specific action needed to keep Aboriginal children and young people safe from abuse and harm.

Schools need to address all forms of racism and consider attitudes and practices that are a barrier to providing a culturally safe environment and to address all forms of racism.

Actions schools must take

To comply with this standard, at minimum, schools must encourage and actively support a child or student’s ability to express their culture and enjoy their cultural rights. Schools can do this in the following ways:

Relevant standards

Implement Standard 1

Implementing this standard will require ongoing effort, not just a once-off change.

Open all

There are many actions schools may use to address this standard. To get started, review the example actions on this page.

Consult with families, students and the local Aboriginal community when developing policies to address this standard.

For additional guidance, use Guidance on Family Engagement (CCYP).

Schools can use these templates to develop policies:

All schools

Government schools

Schools can use this checklist to implement this standard:

Schools must review their child safety and wellbeing policies:

Examples of actions to support cultural safety

https://player.vimeo.com/video/872411322?autoplay=0

Open all

Resources

Open all

Training resources

Open all

Support

For further help to meet Child Safe Standard 1 and Ministerial Order 1359, contact child.safe.schools@education.vic.gov.au.

Possible next steps

Schools can use this checklist to implement this standard:

Read more about implementing all the Child Safe Standards in schools.

Education & training

Updated 26 March 2026



About the VIC Government

Grants and programs

Jobs and careers

Arts, culture and heritage

Business and the workplace

Communities

Education and training

Environment, water and energy

Finance and economy

Health and social support

Housing and property

Law and justice

Safety and emergencies

Science and technology

Sport and recreation

Traffic and transport

Working in the Victorian Government