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Digital Theme Week – Hungary

By Country providing the good practice, Funding of the good practice, INSPIRATION: Good practices, National good practice initiative, Other, Public, Type of initiative of the good practiceNo Comments
Digital Theme Week - Hungary

30.04.2021

Digital Theme Week is an initiative launched by the Hungarian Ministry of Human Resources in 2016, which promotes the responsible use of technology in education and fosters the development of digital skills for students and teachers. The initiative also aims to develop and disseminate innovative approaches in digital pedagogy within the public education system, and extend digital skills and literacy activities in subjects beyond information technology (IT).

About this initiative

Targeting schools, teachers, students, educators and stakeholders in the Hungarian public education system, Digital Theme Week brings together more than 5,000 teachers and up to 130,000 students for one week, carrying out around 2,000 digital pedagogy projects each year. 

The 2024/2025 edition of the Digital Theme Week is planned for 24-28 March 2025. This year’s edition focuses on several topics: digital citizenship, algorithmic thinking and programming as tools for creation, responsible use of AI in education, and digital security. Teachers and schools that choose to participate have a world of resources and pedagogical aids on Digital Theme Week’s website. They also have a repository of online lectures, webinars, and a free handbook available to support learning and teaching.

The initiative essentially offers an opportunity for educators and students to develop and improve their digital skills by participating in a variety of diverse and creative projects on different topics related to the use of digital technology in education. Some pedagogy projects produced over the course of the initiative include: developing activities for students with special needs, initiatives encouraging teacher-to-teacher cooperation through collaborative projects, or knowledge-sharing on issues such as digital security and online safety for children, amongst others.

Why is this a good practice?

Since its launch, Digital Theme Week has succeeded in stimulating the development of a wider knowledge base on a national level and improving the integration of information and communication technology (ICT) in teaching and learning. As of 2019, more than 3,000 projects have been implemented, reaching nearly 8,000 teachers and 135,000 studentsHaving reached 10% of students so far, Digital Theme Week offers room for scalability and replicability. The initiative is sustainable through secured public funding and today represents the biggest digital pedagogy event in Hungary.

Over 800 schools participated in the 2024 edition of the Digital Theme Week in Hungary. Background information and project results are documented extensively in a knowledge base to serve as inspiration and source of ideas for digital skills activities in an educational context. Activities can also be replicated directly, depending on their target group or context.

An accessible and fully sustainable initiative

The Digital Theme Week (which celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2025!) provides a wide range of digital education resources to support teachers and students, with a special focus on facilitating remote education and learning outside of the classroom. Within the resource database of the project, teachers can access multiple tools, instruction and guidance for online distance teaching (tips on classroom organisation, or activities stimulating online collaboration and use of platforms and digital tools).
Pedagogical assistance in the form of sample project packages, learning curricula and good practices in fostering digital skills from an early age is also available via the project’s knowledge database. The database also contains hundreds of resources targeting students and learners, such as handbooks, learning material, webinars, and video tutorials to act as complementary to digital education.

Details

Target audience

Digital skills in education

Digital technology

Level

Basic

Middle

Funding of the good practice

Public

 

Type of initiative of the good practice

National initiative

Country providing the good practice

Other

Start date

01.03.2014

Digital Decade

By EU Initiatives, EU Institutional initiative, INSPIRATION: Initiatives, Other, Type of initiativeNo Comments
Digital Decade

29.04.2021

The Digital Decade is the European Commission forward-looking strategic vision for the development of the digital economy and the transformation of European businesses by 2030. The plan, presented by the European Commission on 9 March 2021, aims to support a prosperous digital future for all. The Digital Decade vision and avenues for the future are also part of Europe’s Digital Compass, a framework to monitor the progress towards the 2030 targets and milestones, whilst supporting a robust governance structure, monitoring system and multi-country projects involving stakeholders and investors from the EU, Member States and industry and private sector.

To achieve the targets outlined within the Digital Decade strategic communication, actions are structured around 4 cardinal points: digital skills, digital transformation of businesses, secure and sustainable digital infrastructures and digitalisation of public services.

The Digital Decade: digital skills for all by 2030

The EU launched actions to increase the number of qualified and competent Information and communication technology (ICT) professionals and train more digital experts to reach 20 million ICT professionals in Europe (in 2019, ICT specialists in Europe were 7.8 million or 4% of the total workforce). Strategic actions on skills also include the bridging of gender and diversity gaps in the technology sector and initiatives targeting women’s career prospects in the field (the IT sector in Europe has one of the highest levels of gender disparity – in 2019, 82.1% of ICT specialists were men).

With the increased dependence on technology, digital competences and skills have become essential to participate in society, take advantage of digital public services, and remain competitive in the labour market. By 2030, 80% of European citizens should possess at least a basic level of digital skills. 

The Digital Decade is part of the wider strategic priority of the European Commission: ensuring that Europe is fit for the digital age. As a strategic initiative, it underpins and complements a variety of recent actions by the EU institutions (Digital Education Action PlanDigital Europe Programme, the Recovery and Resilience Facility) that aim to promote the upskilling of citizens and businesses.

Data from the Report on the State of the Digital Decade 2024

The latest data, published in the Report on the State of the Digital Decade 2024, show that in 2023, the EU employed just under 10 million ICT specialists, accounting for merely 4.8% of total employment. This already created a shortfall of 900 000 specialists compared to the value predicted in 2023 along the Digital Decade trajectory, with an expected deficit of 7.8 million by 2030 if no further investments are made.

Even with regard to the amount of Europeans with basic digital skills, growth is below target. The latest figures from the same report show that in 2023, only 55.6% of EU citizens had at least basic digital skills, up from 53.9% in 2021. In a couple of years, the EU has experienced a mere 1.5% annual progression, far below the necessary average annual growth of over 4.5% over a decade to meet the target. Recent trends underscore the urgent need for significant and immediate efforts to bridge the gap  towards the 2030 target on at least basic digital skills.

2024 Digital Decade - Graph digital skills and public services

The Path to the Digital Decade Policy Programme

The Communication proposed to agree on a set of digital principles, to launch rapidly important multi-country projects, and to prepare a legislative proposal setting out a robust governance through a monitoring and cooperation mechanism with Member States, to ensure progress – the Policy Programme “Path to the Digital Decade (‘Policy Programme’)”.

To this end, the “Path to the Digital Decade” sets out the concrete digital targets which the Union as a whole is expected to achieve by the end of the decade, as first delineated in the Digital Compass Communication. It then sets out a novel form of governance with Member States, through a mechanism of annual cooperation between the Unions institutions and the Member States to ensure that the Union jointly achieves its ambition.

While of course aiming at endowing the whole population of the European Union with basic digital skills, following the European Pillar of Social Rights Action Plan, and Digital Education Action Plan, the “Path to the Digital Decade” projects the  target for those aged 16-74 with at least basic digital skills to 80% in 2030. Moreover, digital training and education should support a workforce in which people can acquire specialised digital skills to get quality jobs and rewarding
careers.

In addition, addressing the major shortage of cybersecurity skills in the EU workforce will be essential, as an important component of protecting the EU against cyber threats. Therefore, in addition to the target on basic digital skills established in the European Pillar of Social Rights Action Plan, the EU shall have a target of 20 million employed Information and Communication Technologies specialists in the EU, with convergence between women and men.

© European Commission 2024

Details

Target audience

Digital skills for all

Digital skills for the workforce

Digital skills for ICT professionals

Digital skills in education

Level

Basic

Middle

Advanced

Expert

Country 

EU

 

Type of the initiative

EU institutional initiative

 

By Country providing the good practice, Funding of the good practice, INSPIRATION: Good practices, National good practice initiative, Other, Public, Type of initiative of the good practiceNo Comments
TO BE FILLED: Here should be the title of the event in capital letters. The same title goes in the section above "ADD TITLE". Please include the country providing the practice in it.

21.04,2021

The e-Schools program is a Croatian initiative by CARNET, the Croatian Academic and Research Network, which ran from 2015 (in its very starting pilot phase of 2015 to 2019) until 2023. The program (the full name of which is ‘e-Schools: Comprehensive Computerisation of School Business Processes and Teaching Processes for the Purpose of Creating Digitally Mature Schools for the 21st Century’) actively strengthened the quality of the Croatian elementary and middle school education system. As one of the largest digital programs targeting primary and secondary education in Europe, the e-Schools program brought a total of 212 million euros to transform and help digitalise the education sector.

About this initiative

The program fostered the development of more digitally mature schools (i.e. schools that have integrated the use of digital technologies in teaching and learning to a large extent) and boosted capacity-building within schools, whilst preparing students for a digitalised job market.

A pilot project (2015-2019) tested the organisational, technological, and educational aspects of introducing information and communication technology (ICT) in the classroom. The experience of the pilot served as the basis to develop the strategy for a system of digitally mature schools in both primary and secondary educational facilities from the Republic of Croatia, implemented between 2019-2022. The initiative supports long-term sustainability and investments in digital skills through the Strategic Framework for the Digital Maturation of Schools and the School System in the Republic of Croatia (2030).

The program provided a platform for teachers and learners. Teachers are equipped with documents supporting the application of digital content and tools in teaching, an e-diary, instructions for using equipment, online distance learning platform and network portals (e.g., e-laboratory on digital tools). A Technical Support Specialist (STP) assists school staff in using the equipment and network from the project, updates operating systems on the equipment as needed, and reports faults to CARNET.

Why is this a good practice?

The e-School programme has contributed to capacity-building through a wide outreach and engagement by its target audience.

Pilot stage achievements

The initiative succeeded in distributing personal ICT equipment (tablets, computers) to many students and teachers in Croatia: 26.350 computers were delivered in the project’s pilot phase, and another 26.755 went out to students in need during 2021. 

More than 150 schools took part in the pilot project from 2015 to 2019, and mobile support teams visited more than 700 school locations with the aim of supporting the digital transformation of education processes by 2022. In 2020, the e-Schools project won 1st place in the category ‘Inclusive growth – skills and education for Digital Europe’, part of the RegioStars Awards – an EU-level contest that awards the best projects in digital education throughout Europe. In 2021, the program was presented as an example of a good practice in digital skills and jobs at a conference on the topic of cohesion policy and investments in digital education, organised by the Ministry of Regional Development and EU Funds, with the support of the European Commission. In 2022, the citizens of Europe chose the e-School program the second best project in the field of regional development funded by the European Union in the past 15 years.

Achievements overall

According to the EU Court of Auditors, the e-Schools project resulted in a 10% boost of the level of digital maturity in primary and secondary schools across Croatia. As part of the celebration of the completion of the e-Schools program, one of the largest projects for the digitalisation of the primary and secondary education system, 10 Regional Education Centres (ROCs) were officially opened.

The project succeeded in reaching almost all primary and secondary schools in Croatia: school network design activities took place at over 2.400 locations of home and branch schools. Active network equipment was also installed, together with a functional wireless network. In total, the project helped to deliver 85.000 laptops for school employees so they can use them in the classroom. Almost 70.000 participants took part in more than 70 workshops, webinars and online courses. Within the same framework, the project produced 98 digital educational contents, 1440 teaching scenarios for teaching subjects, and 350 teaching scenarios for cross-curricular topics with 119 associated interactive content.

Details

Target audience

Digital skills in education

Digital technology

Level

Basic

Middle

Advanced

Expert

Funding of the good practice

Private

Public

Public-private

Type of initiative of the good practice

National initiative

Country providing the good practice

Other

Date

01.11.2015 – 31.12.2023