Forgive me there are a number of misguided and subject illiterate postings here.
Q1 - How many parents have read the child protection policy of the school in which you have placed your child/ren?
Q2 - If as I suspect almost none of you have - why not?
Q3 - Are you aware that there is no mandatory requirement on any school to refer allegations of abuse or witnessed abuse up to and including rape of a child by an adult on school premises to the LADO (do non teaching parents know what or who the LADO is?) police or social services?
Now at this point I feel a member of the teaching profession will be reaching for the keyboard - please don't just read on. Your intended contradiction would be wrong because if you think I am wrong (who wouldn't - my statement is so contra intuitive) then you will have been mislead in your whole school / Designated officer training by whichever training organisation provided it to you. Sadly this is the default.
Please refer to P444. para. b) of "Child Abuse : Law and policy across boundaries" by Prof Laura Hoyano + Dr Caroline Keenan which says :
Professional identification of child maltreatment
There is no mandatory reporting law in England and Wales. The ?Review of Child Care Law? which preceded the Children Act 1989 concluded that ?the shadow of near automatic reporting? would raise ?barriers between clients and their professional advisor's and even between professionals concerned in the same case? which could actually hinder the process of child protection.
In other words it was the medical profession which knackered child abuse being reported to someone independent of the setting for independent assessment.
Another location which explains clearly the statutory framework is here :
www.nspcc.org.uk/inform/research/questions/child_protection_legislation_in_the_uk_pdf_wdf48953.pdf
Please look at paragraph 5 page #3.
So when you drop you DD/DS off at school tomorrow - please appreciate they have no statutory right to have any allegation or alleged or actual witnessed abuse reported to the LADO, police or social services.
Unless a school commits in writing in their child protection policy to 'inform' all allegations to the LADO, your child (and you) has absolutely no rights to have allegations passed to the LADO for independent assessment.
And a final thought. If you think it will never happen to your child and family, you will join the large number of parents who used to think just like you, and I imagine this probably includes the distraught parents of Megan Stammers.