Project CTZN is a programme about safer relationships for young people led by Greater Manchester Police and funded by the Home Office.
The core of the CTZN programme is a mobile-based, digital platform (app), which will be the foundation of a social network created by and for young people. See https://www.ctzn.co.uk
SHEU is supporting the administration of the project, in particular the Year 10 survey.
Letters and leaflets about the project are linked below.
No-one can guarantee that every answer given by every respondent in a survey is completely accurate and honest. However, we can go a long way to improving our confidence in the figures by taking care over each aspect of the process:
What precautions do you take to make sure an individual cannot be identified from their postcode?
There are general precautions about the security of our servers which I am sure every good business would adopt, but we make a special effort with postcodes.
I don't know if your child competed the survey online or on paper - the account to be given in each case is slightly different.
Online, the postcodes are encrypted using GnuPG when storing, and downloaded with the encryption intact (screenshot).
A school, involved with the Health-Related Behaviour Questionnaire (HRBQ) from the Schools Health Education Unit (SHEU), have been able to reassure their pupils, staff, parents and governors following a recent media report.
A newspaper article reported on anxiety-related disorders that can affect teenage girls. Using hard data from their own HRBQ, the school could compare their results with a wider sample.