Socialising at schools: for an inclusive and participatory education fostering democratic values
Reply to Recommendation
| Doc. 16399
| 05 May 2026
- Author(s):
- Committee of Ministers
- Origin
- Adopted at the 1558th meeting
of the Ministers’ Deputies (29 April 2026). 2026 - May Standing Committee (Monaco)
- Reply to Recommendation
- : Recommendation 2303
(2026)
1. The Committee of Ministers carefully
examined Parliamentary Assembly
Recommendation 2303 (2026) “Socialising
at schools: for an inclusive and participatory education fostering
democratic values” and forwarded it to the Steering Committee on
Education (CDEDU), for information and possible comments.
2. The Committee of Ministers notes that, as also recommended
by the Parliamentary Assembly, a strategic policy review will be
accomplished through the mid-term review of the Council of Europe
Education Strategy 2024-2030, 'Learners First', which will take
place at the 27th Session of the Council
of Europe Standing Conference of Ministers of Education, in December
2026 in Montenegro. The review will focus on inclusive education,
the democratic mission of education, digital citizenship education,
vocational education and training, early childhood education and
care, and enhanced co-operation with other international organisations.
The Committee also underlines that several of the Education Department’s
initiatives directly contribute to both the Strategy and the goals
of the recommendation, including the European Space for Citizenship
Education, which will be launched at the 27th Ministerial
Conference, as well as the European Year of Digital Citizenship
Education 2025 and the curriculum framework for Digital Citizenship
Education (DCE Planner).
3. As highlighted in the recommendation, the Committee of Ministers
acknowledges that, to address the global democratic decline, learning
and practicing democracy must be a core political and educational
priority in Europe today. This includes allocating resources and
developing policies that enable schools to respond to multiple societal
and democratic challenges. The Council of Europe Education Strategy
2024-2030 “Learners First” supports member States in achieving this
goal by promoting democratic citizenship and encouraging young people
to engage in democratic processes. The Strategy helps to build more
responsive and resilient education systems, emphasising a holistic
approach to education that considers the physical, emotional, and social
wellbeing of learners. On a broader political level, the Committee
also highlights that the New Democratic Pact for Europe will provide
a framework to strengthen democratic resilience and build more resilient
and responsive education systems.
4. As a result of the previous Ministerial Conference on Education
in 2023, the Committee of Ministers recalls that the Council of
Europe has launched the development of a European Space for Citizenship Education
(ESCE) to support schools in becoming places where democratic, inclusive
and participatory principles can be learned and practised. The ESCE
is a new co-operation instrument aimed at reinvigorating the democratic
purpose of education in Europe, based on shared values and principles,
with the goal of advancing and innovating education for democratic
citizenship. It is a comprehensive response to the decline of democracy
structured around three pillars: (i) shared principles for Education
for Democratic Citizenship (EDC); (ii) a Quality Framework to support
member States in self-evaluation and improvement; and (iii) a co-operation
platform for knowledge sharing and innovation.
5. The Committee of Ministers underlines that the 2026 Ministerial
Conference, entitled 'Empowering Educators for a Democratic Europe
in the Digital Age', will focus on the role of educators, including
teachers, school and university leaders, and civil society, in fostering
democratic values in an ever-changing and increasingly challenging
world. Teachers in early childhood education, primary and secondary
schools, and vocational education and training (VET) institutions
play a central role in developing the democratic competences and
social trust of the next generation.
6. However, the teaching profession is under strain across Europe:
rising polarisation, misinformation, social pressures and growing
expectations are placing teachers at the centre of democratic dilemmas
that they are not always equipped to manage. In this respect, the
Committee of Ministers notes that, besides the work that will be
accomplished at the conference, the Council of Europe has prepared
several publications to support teachers, such as the Guidance document
on RFCDC and VET (2024) and “Learning Democracy in VET in Europe:
An Anthology (2025)”. New initiatives on early childhood education
and care will also provide practical guidance, while the co-operation
component of the European Space for Citizenship Education will facilitate international
co-operation also with other international organisations, innovation
and the sharing of best practices.
7. The Committee of Ministers also notes that the main outcome
of the European Year of Digital Citizenship Education 2025 is a
Council of Europe Road Map for Strengthening DCE 2027-2031. The
road map aims that learners in Europe are empowered to act as active,
responsible and ethical digital citizens. It identifies six key enablers
for a successful implementation that are in line with the recommendations
of the Parliamentary Assembly. These include financing and resource
mobilisation, governance and institutional arrangements, data and
digital infrastructure, peer learning and co-design, legal or regulatory
reforms, and partnerships and collaboration at national, European
and international level. The Education Department launched the DCE Planner
– A curriculum framework for DCE as an essential tool for empowering
young citizens in the digital era.
8. Finally, the Committee of Ministers highlights that the Council
of Europe education policy is learner-centred and human rights-based.
The recently published Toolkit for a Democratic and Inclusive School
Culture was developed as part of the action planned under pillar
1 of the Education Strategy, 'Renewing the democratic and civic
mission of education', which focuses on the right to quality education
for all learners, especially the most marginalised and vulnerable.
Consisting of high-quality, decontextualised materials on democratic
school culture and inclusive education, it was developed by the
Council of Europe within the framework of various capacity-building
projects in member States. The aim is to make these resources widely
available to promote inclusive school cultures and provide appropriate
individual support at system, school, and classroom levels, with
learners at the centre.