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A Collaborative Risk Framework: Building a Culture of Safety

From Compliance to Confidence

 

Schools are already doing important work to make trips safe, enriching, and well-organized. But even the most committed teams can run into trouble when one or two people end up carrying the entire weight of risk planning. That’s where a collaborative model helps—not by spreading responsibility thin, but by distributing it smartly. Everyone knows their role before the trip and in the event of a crisis. No scrambling, no guesswork. And no single person left holding the clipboard in a storm.

At ETI360, we use a structured version of the Collaborative Risk Framework, grounded in ISO 31031:2024, to help schools move from informal coordination to intentional systems. It’s not about more red tape. It’s about better tools, shared protocols, and a culture where safety isn’t siloed—it’s understood, supported, and shared.

Why a Framework Instead of Just a Policy?

 

Policies define the “what.” A good framework gives you the “how.”

Our Collaborative Risk Framework maps risk planning across five phases:

  1. Context & Risk Profiling
  2. Trip Design & Planning
  3. Pre-Trip Briefing & Preparation
  4. Trip Execution & Dynamic Risk Review
  5. Post-Trip Evaluation & Improvement

This structure mirrors ISO 31031, but with workflows adapted to how real-world school trips operate. It enhances, rather than replaces, your existing systems. Before we dive into the phases, it’s worth understanding why this structure matters. These five stages offer a clear path for schools to proactively manage trip safety, rather than scrambling to react once something goes wrong. By organising planning around these consistent checkpoints, schools can make risk a shared, manageable process instead of an individual burden.

Quick Comparison: Old Way vs Collaborative Framework

 

Without Framework With Collaborative Framework
One person owns all risk planning Risk is distributed across clearly defined roles
Emergency roles unclear Each stakeholder knows their job in a crisis
Checklists scattered in personal folders Shared, auditable tools accessible to all roles
Hard to scale or hand off responsibilities Repeatable systems that support team continuity
High stress and burnout Shared responsibility and proactive decision-making

Phase 1: Context & Risk Profiling

 

Every trip starts with understanding the context. Instead of relying on generic checklists, we help schools build risk profiles that reflect:

  • Trip types (e.g. sports, cultural, academic)
  • Past trip challenges and feedback
  • Leader experience levels
  • Seasonal/local risks and geopolitical trends

Tools Provided:

  • Trip Risk Profile builder
  • RAMS templates with editable criteria
  • Provider screening checklist

This gives you a high-quality baseline that supports proportional, not performative, risk planning.

Phase 2: Trip Design & Planning

 

This phase translates trip goals into structured plans that meet duty-of-care expectations. It tackles key questions:

  • Are accommodations and transport safe and age-appropriate?
  • Are third-party providers properly insured and vetted?
  • How will we handle a mid-trip emergency?

What ETI360 Offers:

  • TripRisk360 Dashboard for real-time risk visibility
  • Activity-specific RAMS libraries for common trip elements (e.g. hikes, snorkelling, free time)

Planning becomes more transparent and less dependent on individual memory or legacy processes.

Phase 3: Briefing & Preparation

 

Even the best plans need to be communicated clearly. We focus on making sure all parties—staff, students, and parents—are informed, aligned, and ready.

Included Support:

  • Parent/guardian info packs and consent forms
  • Trip leader duty schedules and on-call guides
  • Local emergency contact sheets with health facilities
  • Itinerary documents with embedded risk annotations

Preparation isn’t just paperwork. It’s a chance to create shared understanding and reduce anxiety across the board.

Phase 4: Trip Execution & Dynamic Risk Review

 

Trips are live events. Conditions change. Our framework equips leaders to adapt safely, not improvise under pressure.

Supports Available:

  • Escalation flowcharts for weather, transport, and political risks
  • Printed or digital day-plans with risk triggers highlighted
  • Defined communication chains and backup leaders

When emergencies happen, the team doesn’t freeze or guess. Everyone knows what to do.

Phase 5: Post-Trip Evaluation & Continuous Improvement

 

Trips are one part logistics, one part learning. We support schools in capturing both:

Tools Include:

  • Debrief templates for students, staff, and providers
  • Risk control checklists
  • Near-miss documentation and reflection prompts

Over time, your school builds a living knowledge base. New leaders don’t start from scratch. Lessons are retained, not lost.

What Do We Mean by “Collaborative”?

 

Collaboration isn’t just a tagline. In risk management, it’s the backbone of resilience.

In our framework, collaborative means structured participation by all stakeholders:

  • No one person owns all the risk
  • Each role has specific responsibilities before, during, and after the trip
  • Decisions are shared, not deferred

This approach ensures that:

  • Risk doesn’t fall through the cracks
  • Staff aren’t left shouldering unrealistic expectations
  • Crisis response is faster, calmer, and more effective

Stakeholder Roles at a Glance

 

Role Responsibility
Head of School Set policy, approve high-risk exceptions
Principal Connect trips to curriculum goals
Director of Safety Lead on thresholds, emergency plans
Trip Coordinator Logistics, documentation, stakeholder communication
Trip Leaders Day-to-day safety, on-the-ground adjustments
Parents/Guardians Provide consent, review disclosures, flag concerns
Students Participate in briefings, follow guidance, report incidents

ISO 31031 in Action

 

Callout Box: Translating Global Standards into School Reality

ISO 31031 outlines how to manage risk for youth and school trips across five stages—from understanding context to post-trip improvement. We’ve built our Collaborative Risk Framework directly on this structure, tailoring it for school workflows, team sizes, and compliance needs. The result? A standards-aligned approach you can actually use.

What It Does (and Doesn’t) Do

 

  • Helps teams reduce gaps, guesswork, and stress
  •  Aligns you with ISO 31031 expectations
  • Improves preparedness and transparency across the board

It’s not:

  • A binder that no one reads
  •  A checklist-only approach
  •  A system for assigning blame after an incident

Instead, it’s a smarter way to organise the work you’re already doing.

Want to implement a version of the Collaborative Risk Framework at your school?

 

ETI360 offers walkthroughs, onboarding, and ready-to-use tools that fit your current systems.

 

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