Brussel, 15 November 2024
Showing that digital education can be safe and protect well-being
This October, the HERMMES project reached about 400 members of the ALL DIGITAL network, the European Commission, the Council of Europe, and their member states.
Presenting the HERMMES approach to the ALL DIGITAL community
From 15 to 18 October a delegation from the HERMMES partnership attended the Summit of Engaged Digital Citizenship in Madrid organised by ALL DIGITAL and Fundacion Esplai. In the Summit, over 400 participants interested in digitalising education and teaching digital literacy (video) gathered. HERMMES was represented in the Digital Village by Márti Domokos and Dora Šimunović from ECSWE, Pieter Bastin from the Association of Flemish Steiner Waldorf schools, and Hilary Siddons from Scoula Novalis school in Italy. They also presented a discussion, From analog to digital: A panel on safe and creative digital media education in schools.
Contributing to the European Commission’s work on digital education
From 22 to 25 October in Helsinki, on behalf of the Lifelong Learning Platform, our advocacy coordinator Dora Šimunović attended a peer learning activity of the European Commission’s working group on Digital Education: Learning, Teaching and Assessment (DELTA). The aim of the activity was to get input into the Digital Education Action Plan 2021–2027 mid-term review from the group members, mainly the representatives of education ministries. They aim for more focus on students’ and teachers’ well-being and safety and emphasis on using digital tools only when it benefits learning. These priorities align well with the HERMMES materials.
Following the Council of Europe’s work on AI in educaiton
From 24 to 25 October, our managing director Georg Jürgens participated in the Council of Europe’s (CoE) Working Conference on Regulating AI in Education. In the event, over 100 experts from 45 countries gathered to explore ethical AI use in education. The task of education should be to emphasise the distinction between the unique characteristics of both human and artificial intelligence. The understanding of this crucial distinction prepares the ground for meaningful, healthy, and safe use of AI in educational settings. With the HERMMES materials, ECSWE intends to contribute further to the CoE’s work during its Year of Digital Citizenship Education in 2025.