When schools closed in 2020, "digital education" stopped being optional. The scramble revealed deep gaps — in devices, connectivity, skills and confidence. The EU Digital Education Action Plan is the policy response, and it reaches well beyond emergency remote teaching.
01A wake-up call
The crisis showed two things at once: digital tools can keep education running, and Europe was badly uneven in its readiness. Some learners had laptops and trained teachers; others had a shared phone and none. The plan exists to make capability the rule rather than the lottery it was.
02What the plan is
The Digital Education Action Plan is a shared EU policy initiative running across this decade. It is not a fund that pays your school directly; it is a framework of priorities, actions and targets that shapes national strategies, Erasmus+ calls and other instruments. It rests on two priorities.
One priority builds the system that delivers digital education; the other builds the skills learners need to thrive in a digital world.
03Priority 1: the ecosystem
The first priority is fostering a high-performing digital education ecosystem. That means the unglamorous foundations: reliable connectivity and devices, teachers who are trained and supported rather than left to cope, high-quality digital content, and the organisational capacity to use it all well. Tools without trained teachers achieve little.
04Priority 2: skills
The second priority is enhancing digital skills and competences for the digital transformation. This spans basic digital literacy from an early age, the ability to think critically about online information and disinformation, and the advanced and specialist skills — including in areas like AI and data — that the economy increasingly needs.
05What it means for schools
For a school or youth organisation, the plan shows up as funding priorities and frameworks to align with: calls that reward digital capacity-building, tools like the SELFIE self-reflection instrument for schools, and an emphasis on whole-organisation development rather than one-off gadget purchases. Aligning your projects to these priorities makes them more fundable and more useful.
The plan reaches the classroom indirectly — through national strategies and funding calls. Knowing the chain helps you find the support meant for you.
06Closing the gap
Underneath every action is one aim: to stop digital education widening inequality. Done badly, technology amplifies existing advantage; done well, it can level it. The plan's success is measured not by how advanced the best schools become, but by how few learners are left behind.
What to remember
- The Action Plan is the EU's response to uneven digital-education readiness.
- It is a policy framework that shapes national strategies and funding, not a direct grant.
- Priority 1 builds the ecosystem: connectivity, trained teachers, quality content.
- Priority 2 builds skills: literacy, critical thinking, advanced competences.
- For schools it appears as funding priorities and tools like SELFIE.
- The core aim is to stop technology widening inequality.
