Some safeguarding topics are easy to schedule and hard to actually talk about. Female genital mutilation sits near the top of that list. It feels distant, it feels sensitive, and nobody wants to say the wrong thing in a staff meeting. The result, in some settings, is that it quietly never gets covered at all. That is the gap this post, and the training behind it, is meant to close.
FGM is a procedure in which the female genital organs are injured or changed for no medical reason. It is frequently traumatic, it can cause lasting physical and psychological harm, and in the UK it is a crime. Those are the facts, and they can be stated plainly, without drama, which is exactly how good training treats them.
Why this belongs in early years training at all
A reasonable question from a busy manager: surely this is a school-age issue? Unfortunately not. The girls most at risk are often very young, which places nurseries and pre-schools directly inside the circle of professionals who might notice something before harm occurs. The number of women and girls living with the consequences of FGM, worldwide and here in England and Wales, is far larger than most people expect, and awareness within early years teams plays a genuine part in prevention and protection.
It helps to be clear about the framing from the start. FGM is a safeguarding and legal issue, not a cultural one. Practitioners sometimes hesitate because they worry that raising a concern could look like judging a community. Good training removes that hesitation: the duty is to the child, the law is unambiguous, and the professional response follows the same safeguarding principles staff already know.
Indicators, risk factors and the space between them
The FGM training course sets the indicators and risk factors firmly in a safeguarding context. It covers what is meant by the term and the forms it can take, why the practice happens, how it affects individuals and communities, and what practitioners must do when a risk is identified, including their legal responsibilities and the support available for those affected.
A risk factor is not an accusation. Knowing that a family has connections to a community where FGM is practised tells you to be thoughtful, not to be suspicious of every interaction. What the training builds is judgement: an understanding of which combinations of circumstances should prompt a conversation with your designated safeguarding lead, and which ones simply sit in the back of your mind as context. Both over-reaction and under-reaction let children down; calm knowledge is the corrective for both.
As with any safeguarding concern, the practitioner’s job stops at noticing and reporting. Nobody on the nursery floor is expected to question a parent about this or to investigate anything. Record what prompted the concern, take it to the DSL, and let the proper process do its work.
Keeping the staffroom conversation professional
Managers sometimes ask us how to introduce this training without making the team anxious. Our honest answer: treat it exactly like the rest of your safeguarding programme. It is one module among many, taught factually, completed online at each person’s own pace over a guided two hours or so. It can be taken individually or rolled out across the whole team, and completion certificates give you clear evidence for compliance and audit.
Staff usually finish this course feeling steadier about the subject, not more alarmed. Most of the anxiety around FGM comes from not knowing what you would do if a concern arose. Once the process is clear, the topic loses its power to unsettle and becomes what it should always have been: one more thing a well-trained team knows how to handle.
Replace hesitation with a clear professional process
This course explains FGM as a safeguarding and legal issue, covering indicators, risk factors, responsibilities and support, and leads to an NFAQ-accredited certificate for your compliance records.
Protection for very young girls depends on informed adults in the places they spend their days. For thousands of children, one of those places is a nursery room. That is the whole argument for putting this course on your training plan this year.

