Working Groups
European Schoolnet has 4 working groups and one interest group set up by our network of Ministries of Education to tackle some of the most important challenges faced by today's education ecosystems.

The Artificial Intelligence in Education Working Group was established in 2025 and is composed of representatives from ministries of education, public education authorities, and related public organisations across European countries. It addresses the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in K12 education, in particular for what concerns teaching, learning, and assessment, looking at policy initiatives, practices and evidence from research to support policy learning in a cross-country context. The working group consists of 20 participating countries: Belgium (Flanders), Belgium (Wallonia-Brussels), Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Spain, France, Croatia, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Poland, Sweden, Slovenia, Slovakia, Türkiye.
The Working Group works on the following areas:
- ◦ Collect and analyse common frameworks for the ethical and responsible use of AI in K12 education.
- ◦ Reflect on how to align national policies with international standards and recommendations (e.g., UNESCO, OECD).
- ◦ Facilitate policy exchanges among members of the Working Group and international collaboration on AI governance, engaging with international experts and international organisations such as EU institutions, OECD, UNESCO, and Council of Europe.
• Support capacity building for AI literacy among educators and learners.
- ◦ Collect and share national strategies for training educators to use AI in school contexts.
- ◦ Identify and share inspiring practices and case studies across countries.
• Projects, Research and Evaluation
- ◦Broker research evidence through presentations by external researchers and experts, and discussions among Working Group members.
- ◦ Collect and share with Working Group members research on the impact of AI on learning, teaching, and assessment.
- ◦ Become a space for project-ideas development on AI in education and main consortium-building platform for members to co-develop with European Schoolnet large projects on AI in education – based on the needs and challenges of the members.
- ◦ Share with Working Group members the state of progress of various AI related projects (e.g. funded by the EC, national funds, etc.) that European Schoolnet and/or education authorities are involved in and ensure that all members can profit from the outcomes of the projects currently developed.
- ◦ Encourage the development of evidence-based policies for the implementation of AI in education.

The ICT@school indicators Working Group was created to share national surveys on ICT in schools, discuss their results and suggest follow-up actions to improve the monitoring of ICT developments in education at the cross-country, European and global levels in a comparative way. The working group also discusses the need for new indicators to better cover and monitor the qualitative processes related to the use of ICT in school, especially in relation to teaching and learning practice, space organisation of the learning environment and innovative teacher training schemes.

The Digital Citizenship Working Group, composed of members or nominees from Ministries of Education (MoEs), was established in 2017. The group typically meets twice a year, aiming to develope a strategic digital citizenship framework, provide guidance for EUN's digital citizenship roadmap and offer a platform for exchange between EUN network members. The group works to identify best practices to share and challenges to overcome, gaps to identify and new areas of work to explore.
Currently, 16 countries participate in the working group: Belgium, Finland, France, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Serbia and Türkiye. In 2024, the first meeting focused on media literacy and how to identify and counter disinformation in connection with the 2024 European elections. The second focused on digital citizenship education and was dedicated to brainstorming for a webinar to be delivered as part of the Council of Europe's European year of digital citizenship education 2025.






Two key political issues affect small and rural schools in Europe: efficiency and unequal access to education.
In November 2019, the Steering Committee of European Schoolnet created the Small and Rural Schools Interest Group to explore issues of mutual concern related to small schools at a European level.
About the Interest group
The Small and Rural Schools Interest Group is composed of 13 countries (Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Malta, Poland, Serbia, Sweden, Slovakia, Spain and Türkiye). It is supported by European Schoolnet and INDIRE — the National Institute for Documentation, Innovation and Educational Research, which is the Italian Ministry of Education's oldest research organisation.
The objectives of this Interest Group are to:
- 1. Collect and share different research findings across European countries.
- 2. Work at the European level on the collection and sharing practices on the use of ICT to overcome isolation.
- 3. Collect and share experiences on learning practices in multi-age classes.
- 4. Collect and share experiences on models of school organisation and links with local communities.
- 5. Consider the opportunity to offer an open community of practices for all practitioners working in small and rural schools, and the chance to create a European network of small rural schools.
- 6. Offer a capacity-building programme for small and rural schools in Europe.
Latest activities and outcomes
In 2024, this interest group created a MOOC for small rural schools as part of the European Schoolnet Academy. The course will open on 29 September 2025 and will consist of four modules.
The core aims of the 'Smart schooling and networking' MOOC are to offer practical tools, inspire ideas and provide a supportive community to help teachers and educators in small and rural schools.
Through the four modules, educators will discover innovative leadership approaches, flexible classroom organisation, multi-age teaching methods, and ways to actively engage parents and local communities. During the course, real-life examples from 24 schools in 12 countries will be shared to illustrate how to turn challenges such as under-capacity and teacher isolation into opportunities for personalised, community-based learning.
In 2023, the Small and Rural Interest Group presented its first publication titled "Rural schools under focus". The publication features 11 monographies, covering 11 countries (Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Malta, Poland, Serbia, Sweden and Spain) in 11 languages, the executive summary and a comparative analysis of the findings of these monographies.
Here you can find:
The executive summary (also available in French)
The monographies

























