Playschools are built on one powerful foundation: trust. Parents hand over their children at the most vulnerable age, believing the school will protect them, nurture them, and act in their best interests. In today’s digital world, that responsibility goes beyond physical safety — it includes protecting a child’s digital identity.
India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) 2023 places special emphasis on safeguarding children’s data. For playschools, compliance with DPDP is not just a legal requirement, it is an extension of child safety itself.
Children in playschools cannot understand or control how their personal data is used. Every photo, video, note, or record is created and shared entirely on their behalf.
Playschools typically handle highly sensitive data, including:
DPDPA recognises children as a protected category and requires institutions handling their data to apply extra care, stricter safeguards, and clear accountability.For playschools, this means digital care must match the same standards as physical care.
Under DPDPA, verifiable parental consent is mandatory before collecting or using a child’s personal data.
For playschools, this consent must be:
Consent should never be hidden inside long admission forms or assumed through silence. Parents must know exactly how their child’s data is being used and must have the freedom to say no. When consent is handled transparently, it strengthens parent trust rather than creating friction.
Sharing photos is common in playschools, parents love seeing their child paint, play, or participate in activities. However, informal sharing methods such as WhatsApp groups or shared folders pose serious risks.
These practices can lead to:
DPDPA requires playschools to limit access strictly and share media only for approved purposes. Secure, privacy-first platforms ensure that only the child’s parents receive their child’s photos, nothing more. This protects the child’s dignity and future digital footprint.
DPDPA strictly restricts tracking, profiling, or targeted use of children’s data.
For playschools, this means:
Any digital tool used by the playschool, including learning apps, cameras, or communication platforms, must respect these boundaries. Choosing privacy-first tools is a key part of child safety under DPDP.
Most data incidents in playschools are not malicious; they are accidental.
DPDPA highlights the need for staff awareness and training. When teachers and caregivers understand safe data practices, child safety becomes a daily habit rather than a rulebook.
Training ensures that every adult in the school protects children consistently — both offline and online.
Playschools should collect only what is necessary. Over-collection increases risk and exposure.
DPDPA encourages schools to:
Less data means fewer risks and stronger protection for children.
Parents today are increasingly aware of digital risks. A playschool that demonstrates responsible data practices sends a clear message:
DPDP compliance becomes a visible sign of quality, care, and professionalism.
Playschools shape the earliest experiences of trust in a child’s life. In the DPDP era, that trust must extend to the digital world.
By adopting clear consent practices, secure media sharing, trained staff behaviour, minimal data collection, and privacy-first tools, playschools can ensure that every child is protected: physically, emotionally, and digitally. Child safety does not stop at the classroom door. It continues wherever a child’s data exists
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