Advisory Boards

Digital, AI & Learning Technology Advisory Board

Navigating technology and AI in education, safely and well.

Our Advisory Boards bring together leading researchers, practitioners and specialists who share our commitment to advancing the science and practice of learning. Our Advisory Boards are advisory in nature, and distinct from our Board of Trustees: our trustees govern the Institute and are responsible for its decisions; our advisers inform and strengthen our thinking.

These Terms of Reference are adopted by the Board of Trustees, and should be read alongside, the IALM Advisory Board Framework and the Advisers' Code of Conduct.

The Digital, AI & Learning Technology Advisory Board is advisory. Its advice is valued but non-binding; the board is not part of the Institute's governance structure and has no delegated decision-making authority. The Board of Trustees retains ultimate responsibility for the Institute's strategy, decisions and resources.

Purpose and Remit

The Digital, AI & Learning Technology Advisory Board advises on the responsible and effective use of technology in learning, including educational technology, the use of artificial intelligence, and digital safety, so that the Institute harnesses technology well while protecting the young people it serves.

Scope

Within Scope

  • Educational technology and its evidence base
  • The use of artificial intelligence in learning and in the Institute's work
  • Online safety, digital wellbeing and data ethics as they affect learners
  • Digital accessibility and inclusion

Out of Scope

  • Decisions binding on the Institute, control of budgets, or direction of staff
  • The governance of the Institute, which remains the responsibility of the Board of Trustees
  • Individual casework, complaints or operational delivery
  • Procurement decisions and the Institute's internal IT and security operations, and the endorsement of specific commercial products or platforms

Chair

Chair (not yet appointed). Appointed by the Board of Trustees.

Membership & Size

Typically four to twelve members. Expertise sought: educational technology and artificial intelligence in education; online safety, digital wellbeing and data ethics; and digital accessibility and inclusion.

Term of Office

Three years, renewable by agreement. Voluntary and unpaid; reasonable, pre-agreed expenses may be reimbursed.

Meetings

On average two meetings per year, held remotely or in a hybrid format, with additional input sought between meetings as required.

How Advice is Provided

Through discussion at meetings; written input; review of materials; and responses to occasional requests from the Institute.

Reporting

To the Board of Trustees, via the Executive Director.

Conflicts of Interest

Members must declare any actual, potential or perceived conflict of interest as soon as it arises. All conflicts are declared and managed under the IALM Conflicts of Interest Policy.

Confidentiality and Data

Members keep confidential information confidential, use it only for the purposes of their role, and handle personal data in accordance with the IALM Privacy Policy and data protection law.

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