Topic
Mandatory Reporting & Child Protection
Reference guides for mandatory reporters: school staff, social workers, counsellors, and clinicians. Each guide flags state-specific obligations and the documentation that holds up if a matter goes to court.
Source authorities
- • State and territory child-protection authorities
- • Children and Young People (Safety) legislation
- • AASW Code of Ethics — child protection practice
8 guides in this topic
Mandatory Reporting Documentation Guide for School Staff in Australia
Every Australian state and territory requires school staff to report suspected child abuse or neglect. This guide covers what to document, when to report, state-by-state obligations, and how structured documentation supports compliance — including how Grounded Scribe surfaces documentation review prompts when reporting patterns emerge.
Read guideNSW Mandatory Reporting for School Staff: A Documentation Guide
Every NSW school staff member is a mandatory reporter under the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998. This guide covers the Mandatory Reporter Guide threshold, what to record before and after submitting an eReport, and how to keep contemporaneous notes that hold up if the matter goes to court.
Read guideVictorian Mandatory Reporting for School Staff: A Documentation Guide
Victorian school staff have mandatory-reporting obligations under the Children, Youth and Families Act 2005, plus the Reportable Conduct Scheme and the Child Safe Standards. This guide explains the four PROTECT pillars, what to document at each stage, and how the documentation aligns with the Department of Education's Four Critical Actions.
Read guideQueensland Mandatory Reporting for School Staff: A Documentation Guide
Queensland teachers, principals, and approved education-and-care staff have specific reporting duties under the Child Protection Act 1999 and the Education (General Provisions) Act 2006. This guide explains the three mandatory pathways (suspected harm, sexual abuse, and student protection within a school), and what to document for each.
Read guideWestern Australian Mandatory Reporting for School Staff: A Documentation Guide
In WA, the Children and Community Services Act 2004 imposes a sexual-abuse-only mandatory reporting duty on a defined class of professionals — including teachers and boarding supervisors. The Department of Education separately requires reporting of all forms of harm via its Child Protection Policy. This guide covers both layers and what to document at each.
Read guideNorthern Territory Mandatory Reporting for School Staff: A Documentation Guide
In the NT, every adult is a mandatory reporter under s 26 of the Care and Protection of Children Act 2007. School staff carry both the universal duty and a separate obligation to report exposure to family and domestic violence. This guide covers what to document under each.
Read guideACT Mandatory Reporting for School Staff: A Documentation Guide
ACT school staff are mandatory reporters under s 356 of the Children and Young People Act 2008. This guide covers the reporting threshold, the Child and Youth Protection Services workflow, and what to document at each stage of a notification — including the additional Reportable Conduct Scheme that applies when an allegation involves a school employee.
Read guideChild Protection Documentation for Social Workers: Writing Notes That Stand Up in Court
Child protection case notes are routinely scrutinised in the Children's Court, Family Court, and coronial inquests. This guide covers the documentation standards social workers need to meet, including separating observation from opinion, recording verbatim quotes, documenting safety assessments, and the AASW record-keeping standards that apply.
Read guide