Jerome Morrissey

CEO
Global e-Schools and Communities’ Initiative (GeSCI)

Jerome Morrissey is the CEO of GeSCI – Global e-Schools and Communities’ Initiative – founded by the United Nations in 2003. GESCI’s mandate is to improve quality and access in education: to empower communities through technology-assisted learning and to accelerate socio-economic development through leadership development for science, technology and innovation driven policymaking and implementation.

Prior to this he was the founding director of the National Centre for Technology in Education in Ireland. He chaired an ICT Expert Strategy Group of the Irish Government to advise on policy and priorities for investment in ICT in education (2008 – 2013).

He was vice-chairperson of the EUN Steering Committee of the European Union Schoolnet – a consortium of 28 Ministries of Education in Europe created in 1997 to lead the way in bringing about change and improvement in learning and teaching through the incorporation of new technologies. He sat on several international committees and advisory groups on ICT in Education and is a member of an EU expert group on indicators on ICT in education established in 2011 by the European Commission, Directorate General for Education and Culture.

He has worked with the OECD in the development of quality criteria for digital and interactive resources in teaching and learning and has written on ICT integration in Education in education/teacher journals, handbooks and newspapers.

CEO
Global e-Schools and Communities’ Initiative (GeSCI)

Jerome Morrissey is the CEO of GeSCI – Global e-Schools and Communities’ Initiative – founded by the United Nations in 2003. GESCI’s mandate is to improve quality and access in education: to empower communities through technology-assisted learning and to accelerate socio-economic development through leadership development for science, technology and innovation driven policymaking and implementation.

Prior to this he was the founding director of the National Centre for Technology in Education in Ireland. He chaired an ICT Expert Strategy Group of the Irish Government to advise on policy and priorities for investment in ICT in education (2008 – 2013).

He was vice-chairperson of the EUN Steering Committee of the European Union Schoolnet – a consortium of 28 Ministries of Education in Europe created in 1997 to lead the way in bringing about change and improvement in learning and teaching through the incorporation of new technologies. He sat on several international committees and advisory groups on ICT in Education and is a member of an EU expert group on indicators on ICT in education established in 2011 by the European Commission, Directorate General for Education and Culture.

He has worked with the OECD in the development of quality criteria for digital and interactive resources in teaching and learning and has written on ICT integration in Education in education/teacher journals, handbooks and newspapers.