Learning aim
Pupils can identify three common online money scams (fake emails, fake adverts, pressure tactics) and explain what to do if they see one.
National Curriculum links
- PSHE Association KS2 L22: about the importance of asking for help; to identify whom to go to and where to find information about staying safe
- Computing KS2: use technology safely, respectfully and responsibly; identify a range of ways to report concerns about content and contact
- PSHE Association KS2 L25: about the role of money in our lives, including online
What you'll need
- Examples of (fake but realistic) scam emails, adverts, and pop-ups on slides
- "Spot the scam" worksheet with 6 examples
- Class display poster: "What to do if you see a scam"
- Online scam spotter worksheet
Lesson structure (45 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Use 4 examples instead of 6. Pre-mark which are scams; pupils explain WHY rather than identifying scam vs real.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Pupils design their own "spot the scam" poster for the school corridor, including all three warning signs and at least one example.
SEND adaptations
For pupils with autism: provide a clear written rule "any email asking for password = SCAM" rather than situational judgement. For pupils with EAL: use visual examples with minimal text.
EAL support
Vocabulary: "scam", "phishing", "trick", "warning signs", "urgent", "suspicious". Sentence stem: "This is a scam because ___."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) name three warning signs of an online scam; (2) identify a scam in a given example; (3) explain what to do if they see one. Exit ticket: "If I get an email that says ___, I will ___."
Homework pack
Four critical activities about staying safe with money online. ~20 minutes.
Spot the scam
What pupils do: Look at three made-up examples of online messages (parent can find or you can imagine): (a) "You've won a £100 voucher — click here!" (b) "Update your password — click here urgently." (c) "Your dad asked me to send him £20. Send me your PIN." Write 2 red flags for each.
Expected output: A table with 3 messages and 6 red flags.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per identified red flag. 6 marks total.
Password rules
What pupils do: Write 4 rules for making a strong password. Then write 2 things you should NEVER do with a password.
Expected output: A "Strong Password Rules" poster with 6 rules.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per rule. 6 marks total.
Trusted adult plan
What pupils do: Make a list of 3 trusted adults you would tell if something online about money worried you. Then write what the FIRST thing you would do is.
Expected output: A list of 3 adults plus a first-action sentence.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per adult, 2 marks for a sensible first action.
Extension (optional)
What pupils do: Find out: what is "phishing"? How can you tell a phishing email from a real one? Write 3 ways.
Expected output: A 3-way "spot the phish" checklist.
Marking guidance: Up to 6 marks for accurate and clear answers.
Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)
Ask a grown-up: "Have you or anyone you know been targeted by an online scam? What happened?" (No need to share details if uncomfortable.)
Classroom safeguarding
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