This document details what personal data DfE processes about learners in key stage 4, key stage 5 and adult learners, including apprentices.
It includes pupils and learners in schools and academies, as well as learners in hospital schools, alternative provision or who are home educated.
Read our privacy notices for:
This notice sets out how we will use your personal data, and your rights in connection to GCS Connect.
Information about the personal data that DfE processes about the education providers’ workforce including:
The DfE personal information charter has details on the standards you can expect when we collect, hold or use your personal information.
This privacy notice explains what personal data we process when developing AI tools and products for use in educational settings. It also applies to those who attend any sessions that DfE may organise to support the development of those tools or products.
Refer to the DfE personal information charter for more information on the standards you can expect when we collect, hold or use your personal information.
This notice sets out how we will use your personal data, and your rights in connection to the GCS mutual mentoring programme, Connecting Diverse Voices.
This policy sets out what you can expect from HMCTS when we hold or request personal information (personal data) about you; how you can get access to a copy of your personal data and what you can do if you think we’ve done something wrong.
HMCTS collects and processes personal data for the performance of its public functions. These include:
HMCTS operates a network of Courts and Tribunals Service Centres (CTSCs) that deal with many aspects of court and tribunal cases in several jurisdictions. This includes dealing with information from our users including telephone, email and webchat. We may contact you via email, letter, telephone, webchat or text message.
When you contact the CTSC we may also record telephone calls as well as keep a record of the text of webchats, emails and webforms.
This document details what personal data DfE processes about parents, carers and legal guardians. It also includes data processed about families.
The DfE personal information charter has details about the standards you can expect when we collect, hold or use your personal information.
This privacy notice sets out the standards that you can expect from HM Courts and Tribunals Service (HMCTS) when we process personal information within forms used in tribunal proceedings.
Help with Fees is a service that gives help with court or tribunal fees to those with little savings and who are on certain benefits or a low income. This policy sets out how we use the information you provide when making a Help with Fees application using the paper form EX160.
A separate privacy policy applies when you apply for Help with Fees using our online service. That version, along with the online service’s terms and conditions, are available on the Help with Fees online service.
CDEI plans to run a Fairness Innovation Challenge to support the development of novel solutions to address bias and discrimination across the artificial intelligence (AI) lifecycle. The challenge also aims to provide greater clarity about which assurance tools and techniques can be applied to address and improve fairness in AI systems, and encourage the development of holistic approaches to bias detection and mitigation, that move beyond purely technical notions of fairness.
As we finalise the design and scope of this challenge, the CDEI is now collecting use case submissions of specific fairness-related problems faced by organisations designing, developing, and/or deploying AI systems. This privacy notice explains who the CDEI are, the personal data the CDEI collects, how the CDEI uses it, who the CDEI shares it with, and what your legal rights are.
The ‘Longitudinal education outcomes study’ compares students’ level of education to their level of employment and earnings in later life.
Read more information about how we share student and workforce data.
To ensure this privacy notice is up to date, we will review this information annually.
BEIS would like to hear from users of the ECUK annual report and associated statistical publication to inform its future work programme We have prepared a https://forms.office.com/r/53xYGFTyWv" class="govuk-link">short survey so you can tell us about how you use the ECUK publication and your priorities for future developments. The survey will be open to responses until 7 January 2022. Please see the published privacy notice for information on how we will use the data provided.
You can use this https://beis2.shinyapps.io/ecuk/" class="govuk-link">dashboard to interact with and visualise energy consumption in the UK (ECUK) data. You can filter the data according to your area of interest.
Please email energy.stats@beis.gov.uk if you have any feedback or comments on the dashboard.
This document details what personal data DfE processes about stakeholders in various organisations.
Read the DfE personal information charter for more on the standards you can expect when we collect, hold or use your personal information.
This annual statistical notice provides summary statistics on the causes of deaths that occurred among the UK veterans of the 1990/91 Gulf conflict.
Upcoming release dates for this publication are available here.
The CDEI has been tasked with researching the ways in which algorithmically driven recommendation systems have impacted music consumption, including how creators are being affected (see Recommendation 18 in the government’s response to the economics of music streaming Committee’s Second Report). The CDEI will be carrying out a survey to take the views of creators into consideration as part of our research, as well as begin to understand if and how algorithmically driven recommendation systems affect different categories of creators, creators across different genres, and whether there are any apparent differences in their effect by region, age, gender identity, or ethnic group. This privacy notice explains who the CDEI are, the personal data the CDEI collects, how the CDEI uses it, who the CDEI shares it with, and what your legal rights are.
Building on its Roadmap to an Effective AI Assurance Ecosystem, the CDEI’s AI Assurance Programme supports the government’s ambition to build the most trusted and pro-innovation AI governance system in the world. Over the last six months, the CDEI has been carrying out significant industry engagement in order to understand the key barriers and enablers to the adoption of AI Assurance tools and techniques.
The CDEI is now carrying out a survey to understand current industry participation with AI assurance, with a particular focus on three key sectors - finance, automated vehicles, and recruitment. Key themes from the survey findings will be shared publicly, and the views shared with the CDEI will directly influence the next stage of our work, which aims to develop practical guidance to address the challenges identified, and encourage increased adoption of AI assurance across industry. This privacy notice explains who the CDEI are, the personal data the CDEI collects, how the CDEI uses it, who the CDEI shares it with, and what your legal rights are.
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This document details what personal data DfE processes about learners in key stage 4, key stage 5 and adult learners, including apprentices.
It includes pupils and learners in schools and academies, as well as learners in hospital schools, alternative provision or who are home educated.
Read our privacy notices for: