This is not simply about whether schools use AI.
It is about how schools are actively shaping their use of AI to support learning, protect wellbeing, and ensure developmentally appropriate practice.
The real work now is not reacting to AI, but making deliberate decisions about boundaries, safety, timing, and what must remain deeply human in education.
This webinar will aim to address:
Hosted by Sally Webster, and featuring Dan Hart, Ishita Vig, Simon Torok and Matthew Esterman this session will explore how AI is already shaping students, learning and wellbeing, and what schools need to do next.
A key focus of this session will be on not just asking what AI can do, but examining what schools must actively design for.
This includes:
This is not a conversation about whether AI is good or bad.
It is a conversation about whether its use is informed, intentional, developmentally appropriate and safe.
The real concerns for schools are practical and immediate:
Without clear direction, AI use becomes inconsistent, accidental and potentially unsafe.
With clear direction, it can be purposeful, supportive and educationally sound.
This webinar will focus on the decisions schools need to make now:
This session is for school leaders, educators, wellbeing teams and families who recognise that AI is already shaping education — and want to move beyond awareness to clear, practical action.
For those asking not just what is happening, but what should we be doing about it now.
Sally Webster is a senior education, technology and policy leader, and Chief Operations, Strategy & Growth Officer at Life Skills GO. She has held senior leadership roles across the NSW Department of Education and Amazon Web Services, shaping digital learning strategy, education policy, EdTech procurement, AI in education, system transformation and cross-sector partnerships. Known as a connector and translator between educators, technologists and policymakers, Sally brings deep experience in governance, global education advisory, crisis response and high-impact digital transformation. Through National Check-In Week, she is committed to elevating student voice and helping educators, leaders and policymakers use meaningful data to better support every child.
Dan is the Founder of CurricuLLM, an AI-powered personalised learning platform built around the Australian and New Zealand curricula. Before CurricuLLM, he les the team that built NSWEduChat at the NSW Department of Education, one of the world's largest implementations of AI in a government education setting. His work sits at the intersection of AI, education, and student safety. He is focused on ensuring that as AI enters classrooms, it is purpose-built for curriculum, aligned to how teachers actually work, and designed with student wellbeing at its core. Dan writes and speaks publicly on AI in education, AI governance, and the broader implications of AI for young people and the workforce.
Matt Esterman has over 20 years working in schools and beyond as a leading voice in the thoughtful adoption of technology. He is a trained History teacher with two masters degrees, who has made a significant contribution to educational thinking in Australia and overseas. He has written articles, book chapters, presented at local, state, national and international conferences on history, technology, and, of course, AI in education. Matt has been recognised with several awards, most recently a Commonwealth Bank national Teaching Fellow award, and a NSW Teacher’s Guild fellowship. Matt has founded The Next Word, a consultancy that seeks to leverage AI and other technologies to help shape a better future. He works with schools, universities and other organisations to increase awareness and capability in using AI. He has co-authored two books with Dr Nick Jackson, “The Next Word: AI & Teachers” (2024) and also “The Next Word: AI & Learners” (2025) co-written with award-winning high school student Amy Wallace. Matt has been appointed an Adjunct Fellow in the School of Education at Western Sydney University, and is a member of the HP Futures: AI & Leadership Council. In 2026, he is working with several schools and systems on thoughtful governance, strategy and implementation of AI within thriving school communities. In partnership with ClassCover, he is also co-founder of Educator Intelligence a platform that will help educators across the world build and maintain their knowledge and skills in AI.
Simon Torok is a passionate technologist, focusing on improving education through technology. This has spanned his over 15 years in the education industry, working at Apple, Google, Instructure and now at Sentral.

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