OPEN EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES

The Internet’s Best-Kept Secret for Youth Workers

We’ve combed the web, begged favours from colleagues, and unearthed hidden gems — all to build you a no-nonsense, constantly growing collection of the best free, open, actually useful resources for digital youth work. No templates. No fluff. Just good stuff you can actually use.

Collage of youth workers and young people using laptops and tablets in relaxed, collaborative settings, with floating icons representing search, download, and open licenses

What We’ve Found (So Far)

Curated, tested, and tagged by humans — not algorithms.

Workshop Plans

Ready-to-run, no-prep-needed sessions on TikTok ethics, meme activism, digital wellbeing, and more. Tested in real youth spaces.

50+ activities | Ages 12-25 | 60-120 mins

Toolkits & Guides

Practical handbooks on digital safety, inclusion, AI, data protection, and how to explain “digital youth work” to your skeptical boss.

20+ guides | For teams & managers | PDF & editable

Curated Finds

The good stuff we found elsewhere: brilliant projects, underrated blogs, hidden reports, and tools you didn’t know you needed.

30+ gems | From across Europe | Always free

Illustration showing three simple steps: 1. Browse, 2. Download, 3. Adapt & Share, with smiling youth workers and floating download arrows

How to Use This Magic

1. Browse

Filter by theme, age group, duration, or vibe. Lost? Hit “Surprise Me” for a random gem.

2. Download

Click. Save. Done. Everything’s free, open-license (CC BY-SA 4.0), and comes with zero strings attached.

3. Adapt & Share

Change it. Remix it. Make it yours. Then send it back to us — we’ll add it to the collection with your name on it.

Found Something Amazing? Send It Our Way.

Stumbled on a brilliant guide? Ran a workshop that went viral (in your youth center)? Created something you’re weirdly proud of? Share it with us. If it sparks joy (and pedagogy), we’ll add it to the collection — with full credit to you, of course.

Illustration of a hand dropping a glowing resource file into a shared community box labeled 'Your OER Here'