Hero background

Cyber Safety Drama

Drama • 60 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

Download now

Free PDF · we'll email you a copy

Drama
60
25 students
9 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 3 in the unit "Cyber Safety in Drama". Lesson Title: Introduction to Cyber Safety Lesson Description: In this lesson, students will explore the concept of cyber safety through discussion and interactive activities. They will learn about the different forms of cyberbullying and the impact it can have on individuals. Students will engage in role-playing scenarios to identify safe and unsafe online behaviors.

Cyber Safety Drama

Overview

This 60-minute lesson introduces sixth class students to the concept of cyber safety through drama activities. It emphasises understanding cyberbullying, recognising safe and unsafe online behaviours, and promoting empathy via role play. This lesson aligns with the Irish primary school curriculum framework (Curriculum framework for the Irish education system - IE), especially the strands relating to Drama and SPHE (Social, Personal and Health Education).


Learning Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  • Drama specific:

    • Devise and perform short role-plays to explore relevant social issues (Drama Strand Unit: Developing competence and confidence in drama, NF03)
    • Demonstrate empathy and express emotions effectively through characterisation (Drama Strand Unit: Drama as a means of expression, NF03)
  • SPHE / Cyber Safety (linked):

    • Identify types and examples of cyberbullying (SPHE Strand: Myself and the wider world - Digital citizenship, NF04)
    • Recognise the impact of cyberbullying on individuals’ wellbeing (SPHE Strand: Myself and the wider world - Safety and protecting, NF04)
    • Suggest strategies to stay safe online and support peers (SPHE Strand: Myself and the wider world - Safety and protecting, NF04)
  • Develop communication and collaboration skills through group work and class discussion (General curriculum skill development)


Curriculum Links & Key Competencies

  • Drama: Creating and expressing through role-play, improvisation, empathy building
  • SPHE: Understanding personal safety and responsible digital citizenship
  • Key Competencies: Critical thinking, interpersonal skills, self-awareness, resilience

Materials Needed

  • Printed scenario cards depicting safe and unsafe online interactions
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Space for small group role plays (arranged seating or open floor space)
  • Reflection worksheet (prompt questions about feelings, observations, and learning)

Lesson Structure

Introduction (10 minutes)

  • Warm-up discussion: Teacher initiates a class conversation asking, “What do you understand by cyber safety?” and “Has anyone heard of or experienced cyberbullying?”
  • Write key ideas on the whiteboard: privacy, kindness, safe websites, identity protection, harassment, exclusion, etc.
  • Use age-appropriate language ensuring clarity and sensitivity.

Activity 1: Brainstorming Cyberbullying Types (10 minutes)

  • Explain different cyberbullying forms (e.g., sending hurtful messages, social exclusion online, spreading rumours, impersonation).
  • Students work in pairs to identify or think of examples from their experience or media they are familiar with.
  • Pairs share one example with the class, teacher records on whiteboard under categories.

Activity 2: Role-Play – Safe vs Unsafe Online Behaviour (25 minutes)

  • Divide class in groups of 5 (5 groups). Give each group 2 scenario cards: one showing a positive online interaction; one showing a potentially harmful or unsafe situation.
  • Examples of scenarios:
    • Receiving kind messages vs receiving mean messages in a group chat
    • Asking for help about an uncomfortable message vs ignoring and not telling anyone
    • Sharing a private photo with trusted friend vs sharing with strangers
  • Groups prepare a short 2-minute role-play for each scenario demonstrating the situation and a positive resolution when applicable. Emphasise acting skills: voice, facial expression, body language.
  • Each group performs for the class. After each performance, facilitate brief feedback discussion guided by teacher questions:
    • What unsafe behaviour was shown?
    • How did the character feel?
    • What could be done differently for safety?

Reflection and Consolidation (10 minutes)

  • Distribute reflection worksheets with questions:
    • What did you learn about cyber safety today?
    • Which scenario felt most real to you, and why?
    • How can you protect yourself and others online?
  • Students complete silently or in pairs.
  • Volunteer students share positive thoughts or learning points.

Conclusion & Teacher Notes (5 minutes)

  • Recap importance of empathy and kindness online using drama as a powerful tool to understand others’ experiences.
  • Encourage students to talk to trusted adults if they ever feel unsafe online.
  • Briefly introduce next lessons focussing on coping strategies and reporting unsafe behaviours.

Assessment Criteria

  • Observation of student engagement and understanding during discussions and role-plays
  • Ability to identify and explain cyberbullying types and their effects
  • Use of empathy and clear expression in role-play performances
  • Reflection worksheet responses demonstrating thoughtful learning

Differentiation and Inclusion

  • Pair stronger students with peers needing support for confidence building
  • Provide clear, simple language prompts for students who may struggle with vocabulary
  • Allow students to express themselves verbally instead of written reflection if preferred
  • Ensure scenarios consider diverse experiences and avoid stereotypes

Teacher Tips to ‘Wow’

  • Use dramatic voice modulation and mime demonstration when modelling role-plays to spark interest
  • Integrate short multimedia clips (simple animations or storytelling) without hyperlinks for variety if resources allow
  • Encourage students to create their own cyber safety ‘superhero’ character next lesson to protect online spaces through drama
  • Reinforce positive peer feedback to boost confidence and classroom community

By embedding the development of empathy, digital citizenship, and expressive skills within the Drama context, this lesson offers an engaging and safe environment for sixth class students to begin their journey towards cyber safety awareness in alignment with the IE curriculum framework.

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across Ireland