Digital Wellbeing Educators Erasmus Project
General information for the Digital Wellbeing Educators Erasmus Project
Project Title
Digital Wellbeing Educators
Project Key Action
This project related with these key action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices
Project Action Type
This project related with this action type : Strategic Partnerships for higher education
Project Call Year
This project’s Call Year is 2018
Project Topics
This project is related with these Project Topics: ICT – new technologies – digital competences; EU Citizenship, EU awareness and Democracy; New innovative curricula/educational methods/development of training courses
Project Summary
In the midst of a global pandemic, HEIs have had to rapidly change to large-scale delivery of online education and many teachers and students have felt ill-equipped for the change with consequent effects on health and wellbeing. The challenge is that access to digital media has outpaced our ability to guide its responsible use. Many teaching staff feel disadvantaged by having grown up in a pre-digital world, and yet are concerned with the wellbeing of their students and their own ability to thrive in digital settings. The digital wellbeing project is timely in providing open educational resources for teachers and students.
The Digital Wellbeing Educators project focused on increasing the capacity of lecturers and teachers to integrate digital education in a way that promotes the digital wellbeing of students. Our theory of change is that through building teacher capacity, we can improve students’ abilities to manage their online time, make the most of digital learning, critically assess the media they consume and create, and become responsible, confident digital citizens.
To achieve this we have:
– Identified innovative digital wellbeing interventions (IO1: Compendium of Practice)
– Researched the views of experts on the risks, challenges, opportunities and future directions on digital wellbeing practice (IO1: Compendium of Practice)
– Developed a framework of 8 modules as an open resource for teachers to use to teach digital wellbeing (IO2: Digital Wellbeing Education Framework & App)
– Developed a mobile App that provides a short course on Digital Wellbeing for students (IO2: Digital Wellbeing Education Framework & App)
– Produced a Teachers’ Digital Pedagogy Toolkit and short e-learning course to improve the digital literacy of teachers and develop their confidence in integrating digital tools in their teaching (IO3 Digital Pedagogy Toolkit and short course).
The project involved the direct participation of 20 HE teachers and 67 HE students in evaluating the Digital Wellbeing Educators’ framework and app, 60 teachers in evaluating the Digital Pedagogy Toolkit and course. A further 51 lecturers and teachers, from 13 countries took part in the Learning Activity including information and orientation sessions using the reseources created by the project, participatory group work and knowledge exchange. 99 external stakeholders engaged in multiplier events including vocational trainers, education policy makers and digital wellbeing trainers. These online events attracted participants from its main target regions of Spain, UK and Ireland but also from a 9 other countries throughout the world.
The project has had the following impact:
a) Teachers, lecturers and educators have improved their understanding of the risks of social and digital media usage and 90% teachers (at multiplier event) and 100% teachers (at training event) said that they are planning to use the resources to introduce more effective pedagogic strategies for teaching and assessing digital competences congruent with digital wellbeing. 95% said that the resources would improve their ability to teach and 100% said that they would recommend the resources to colleagues.
b) HE Institutions, universities and colleges have strengthened their commitment to supporting the digital wellbeing of their staff and their students. In encouraging teachers to integrate digital wellbeing teaching and practices into their programmes, institutions offer higher quality learning opportunities to students in a supportive manner. Thus, they provide a more well-rounded civic and social education of value to society and students themselves.
c) Students (who participated in user testing) have become better equipped to make the most of digital learning and develop more critical thinking skills, enabling them to critically assess the media they consume and create. Feedback from students highlighted how the App made them more aware of risks of online activity and helped them reflect on their social media use.
d) Raised awareness of the issue of digital wellbeing in students and staff at HEIs.
Overall, the project outcomes are well positioned to offer support for digital wellbeing and digital pedagogy to HEIs during this large scale move to online teaching and learning that is happening across Europe and beyond. The project contributes to the on-going and very timely debate on the role of HEIs in contributing to digital wellbeing and the provision of a well-rounded education that contributes to socially-responsible adults. By working with stakeholders, the project has developed a set of tools to equip educators and HEIs to support the digital wellbeing of their students. Thus it will contribute to the Renewed EU agenda for Higher Education and feed into the ongoing development of the Digital Competence Framework for Digitally Competent Organisations.
EU Grant (Eur)
Funding of the project from EU: 247595,4 Eur
Project Coordinator
UNIVERSITY OF LANCASTER & Country: UK
Project Partners
- European E-learning Institute
- LETTERKENNY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
- MOMENTUM MARKETING SERVICES LIMITED
- UNIVERSIDAD DE ALCALA
- EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES CONTINUING EDUCATION NETWORK

