The Inclusive Digital Learning Revolution

Digital innovation has transformed education over the past decade, but the next ten years will be shaped by a more fundamental question: can learners actually access, understand, and benefit from the technology meant to support them? Mark Hayter, educator at Reddam House Waterfall, argues that the conversation is moving away from novelty and toward practicality.

“Schools want digital tools that work in real classrooms, for real learners, within real constraints,” Hayter writes. This shift mirrors a broader global trend—as artificial intelligence, adaptive platforms, and multimodal content mature, educators and policymakers are increasingly focused on inclusion rather than just innovation.