Modern Slavery Training, Page 3 Reviews
We ask our users to rate and review our Modern Slavery Training course immediately after they've completed their training. Here's what people are saying...
Average score 4.8
1815 reviews
While this course was interesting and I did learn a thing or two, I felt it was largely irrelevant to an employee of a medium office-based organisation. The impetuous on the individual to identify instances of slavery inside and outside of work is a little silly - you can't tell whether someone you see washing cars through a bus window is a slave, nor would you have any reasonable suspicion. There should be more emphasis on the role of small, rogue operators and the authorities, government policy and police, tackling this.I was interested to learn in the opening sections that instances where migrants pay people to help them into the UK is actually smuggling rather than trafficking - the two are very confused in public discourse. But then one of the questions at the end refers to the people receiving money as traffickers rather than smugglers, so which is it?The 'just under 25% of hospitality workers are migrants' statistic is I feel completely irrelevant to the sentence that followed: 'some are modern slaves' - well yes but how many is some. A large percentage would be perfectly legitimate migrant workers I imagine.
Told the story, but more practical examples would assist in the presentation. Showing some true prosecuted cases would be beneficial to adhere to the memory.
No summary provided
The course identifies some red flags about modern slavery but doesn't mention about things being cheap. That cheap clothing or cheap manicures can (but not necessarily) involve people being paid poor wages - i.e., have a think about what the supplier has done to make that item seem so cheap etc.
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Even if you display you understood the question you are treated to a further explanation, really not required
Not sure why need to sit through a video that can't be moved forward, much prefer to read the script in my own time and own pace.
I can see the need for the coarse
The course is too long, and could be condensed without losing content. Main concern is that there is no information on, or examples of, encountering modern slavery outside the UK. ie when working abroad. What might it look like, what to do? This is not just a supply chain/manufacturing issue; eg what if your partner /hotel/colleagues appears to use forced labour e.g. for drivers. what should you do? what are the legal and or ethical responsibilities? what if that is 'normalised' in that country
No summary provided