PARENTS rely too much on schools to teach their children about online safety, according to 82 per cent of teachers surveyed globally by online security company AVG Technologies.

The research highlights the ongoing discussion over the responsibility for delivering online safety education to children, with a further 38 per cent also believing that the parents of their pupils do not know enough about the topic themselves.

The research, in which almost 1,800 teachers globally were interviewed, indicated a need to provide teachers with more support and training for educating children on the subject of online safety. Two thirds (64 per cent) of respondents agreed that schools should provide better training on using the Internet as an educational tool, and 77 per cent stated Internet safety should be a dedicated part of the education syllabus.

Tony Anscombe, Senior Security Evangelist, AVG Technologies, says this highlights the concerning gap between the knowledge and capabilities of teachers and the expectations of parents. Though more than nine out of ten (92 per cent) teachers of a wide range of subjects confirmed they use Internet content in class and 69 per cent discuss online safety on an occasional or frequent basis, only one in four have actually had formal training to teach online safety skills (28 per cent).

"Today's teachers are not only using the Internet regularly as part of their lessons, they are increasingly having to deal with the wider issues it generates and quite often, without any formal training," said Mr Anscombe. "Given the degree to which the Internet is now used as an education tool, many teachers said their schools have put guidelines in place to deal with the most prevalent issues. The gap is that the majority of teachers had not received any formal training in online safety so these guidelines alone are not sufficient. When one in four teachers have had a child come to them with a cyberbullying issue, it is clear to see why more support is needed."

AVG presented more research findings during the Child Internet Safety Summit in London on July 3, during which it also released the second in its series of interactive children's education books, called Magda & Mo. The books are part of AVG's wider aim to provide families with useful tools to help develop a child's understanding of how to make the right choices online, and give parents practical guidance on the subject.

Brazil bucked the global trend, with its teachers leading the way when it came to Internet safety education. The majority (54 per cent) teach it regularly and 51 per cent have been formally trained to do so.

Most UK teachers indicated their school had IT classes (91 per cent compared to 72 per cent overall) but only 37 per cent of teachers had formal training in online safety.

American schools were least likely to have IT classes (only 60 per cent) and only 40 per cent of teachers set homework that required online resources to complete (compared to 57 per cent globally)

Canadian children were most likely to bring their own devices to school to work on, according to 29 per cent of teachers (compared to 18 per cent globally). These were most likely to be a laptop (84 per cent), a smartphone or a tablet (both 82 per cent).

Teachers in Germany were more likely to have had children come to them because of cyberbullying (36 per cent compared to 25 per cent globally). Of these, nearly half (46 per cent) felt they were ill-equipped or not equipped at all to deal with it.

Australian schools topped the list for having guidelines already in place for cyberbullying issues (80 per cent) and situations involving pupils viewing inappropriate content online (75 per cent).

Only 7 percent of teachers in Czech Republic said their school had run a parent's evening that included an opportunity to educate parents about online safety. Yet 78 per cent of parents have expressed concerns around their child's online safety during a parent's evening.

91 per cent of teachers in France said their school provides devices for children to use, but these were mostly desktop PCs (80 per cent). Only 35 per cent offered laptops (46 per cent global average) and 9 per cent provided tablet (compared to 32 per cent globally).

More than four in five teachers (82 per cent) in New Zealand discuss internet safety skills in their classes to some degree, yet the same number have not had formal training in the subject.

AVG commissioned an online survey interviewing teachers of a variety of subjects with children between the aged of three to 18 to identify levels of training on security awareness in the following markets; Australia, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Germany, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. A total of 1,760 teachers carried out the 10 minute survey during June 2014. Research Now carried out the fieldwork using their proprietary panels.