Friday, 21 November 2008

So what have you been up to?

Here's a catch up after several busy weeks [a bit long, sorry].

3 Nov: Regional ICT Forum, Guildford.

I run a regional forum for anyone involved in ICT-related activities in the voluntary and community sector in the south east. We had a good turn out and spent a very useful couple of hours before lunch talking about how we work with funders to help improve the way that voluntary and community orgs budget for their ICT. This included the input of someone from the Big Lottery Fund and looked at how best to encourage VCOs to think about Total Cost of Onwership when budgeting for ICT - like buying a car and including petrol, insurance and driving lessons in the budget.

There was a lot of support for this work amongst the group but there were also lots of questions about how funders will respond and how we can help them make better decisions. The first step we agreed was to work together on a draft set of guidelines which we ask funders to adopt. We also reviewed other aspects of the proposed regional ICT strategy and came up with plans for workshops about 'How to Buy a Website' which Lucian and I will be running in the new year.

Full notes of the meeting are still in draft I'm afraid, but more to come soon.

6 Nov: RAISE conference/AGM, Oxford.

RAISE is the regional body representing the voluntary and community sector so this was a great opportunity for networking. I learned a lot about Compacts and Local Area Agreements [LAAs] and their relevance to the sector but felt depressed by the presentations by a selection of National Support Services - now known as Improving Support Workstreams. There really is a lot to do to make these worth more than the sum of their very disjointed parts.

7 Nov: Judging the Digital Media Awards: South

A whole day locked in Midnight's basement judging for DiMAS. The other judges were a great bunch and this was a lot of fun. The whole this was very tiring but everyone got a fair crack of the whip and you can see the fruits of our deliberations at www.thedimas.co.uk

The winners are announced at the glittering awards ceremony on 17 November at All Saints Church in Hove, which I'm co-hosting with local funny man Stephen Grant.

I spent the evening celebrating the 10th birthday of the wonderful Working Together Project at a fun-packed event attended by just about everyone who's anyone in the local voluntary sector, and featuring Michelle from Gender Trust's fab stand up routine. I was much less drunk than I expected but also much much more tired than I hoped so went home early.

10 Nov: Big Lottery Fund south east Helper Agencies event, Portsmouth

A nightmare day for journeys but I had a really useful trip to Portsmouth attending an event for Big Lottery Fund [BLF] Helper Agencies [2.5 hours there, 4 hours back!].

These events are run by BLF for funding advisers and other people who provide support to voluntary and community organisations. The aim is to make sure that as many people as possible understand the various funding programmes offered by the Lottery in the region. This session included a great exercise where we had to choose between six funding bids, as if we were on the Lottery Awards panel.

It was a mixed bunch of about 30 people: mainly local authority but lots of voluntary sector organisations such as CVS funding advisers. It was tough exercise but in the end we came to fairly similar conclusions about who we'd give the money to, and I'm now looking forward to delivering a similar workshop in the new year to help people think about budgeting for IT.

12 Nov: Build and Manage Your Own Website, training workshop, Brighton

Libby Davy and I delivered a really positive first session in web design training for a small community org in Coldean, a neighbourhood on the edge of Brighton. This is the first time I've delivered a workshop that uses Wordpress to help groups produce their own website. Everything we prepared went down really well and we had two hours and a group of four to teach, which was a nice gentle introduction. I'm really looking forward to the next session next wednesday evening, to be followed by four more sessions after xmas.

13 Nov. Intellect Third Sector Working Party meeting, London

Intellect is the trade body for the IT indutsry and its swanky Russell Square HQ drew a good mix of people who heard from a great set of speakers including the head of NCVO's Collaboration and ICT Unit, the Digital Inclusion Team who highlighted some great resources and, my fave, Julie from Cosmic who talked about her work in a really inspiring way. Cosmic is the same age and delivers almost exactly the same work as SCIP but is based in beautiful Ottery St Mary in Devon.I have thought of it as SCIP's cousin, but under Julie's guidance it is fast becoming more like a big sister.

I made some good contacts and enjoyed the very positive discussion about supporting use of IT by the third sector. I'm not sure where else this sort of audience may come together so I'm hoping it will continue to grow, esp as a forum for shaping relationships.

Quick catch up with some of the other regional champs afterwards - great to see them and a shame we can't seem to coordinate more face-to-face meetings better/at all.

14 Nov. NetWeight, University of Brighton

I chaired a meeting for NetWeight project, a DoH-funded research programme led by Prof Flis Henwood at Uni of Brighton. It was a lively and very informative session summing up the work we've done to date on the project, and especially reflected on some workshops I helped run. These were about how people could use ICT to self-manage their weight but included introducing complete beginners to blogging, storytelling and redesigning local websites.

I really enjoy being involved in this project and there was a really good mix of people at the meeting, including workshop participants [also known as The Guinea Pigs], members of the research team and partners such as local providers of health information.

Much more work is needed to capture and feed back key issues for the Department of Health, but I'm already building lessons from these workshops into what I'm delivering in my web design workshops in Coldean. I also hope we can do some more work with the participants from these workshops, beyond the life of this project.

17 Nov. Chain Reaction 08

Had a great day out a Chain Reaction event on the south bank in London. As well as crying at the video for Peace One Day, I got to hear Lord Mandelson and Gordon Brown talking up social enterprise we also got to hear from Dragon's Den tall boy Peter Jones, Tim Smit from the fab Eden project and loads of inspiring people out to change the world.

I was a social reporter for the day with David Wilcox leading a busy band of people adding lots of live content to reflect the day's events. The videoboo was an especially eye-catching means of conducting video interviews and beaming them online. I particularly enjoyed mixing it with lots of young people from all sorts of volunteering projects, and learning more about Disruptive Innovation. Very enjoyable train ride home too.

20 Nov: Social Enterprise Day.

Illness had kept me sidelined for a couple of days but I did get an hour with some politics students who wanted to know more about SCIP's work. I took the chance to explain social enterprise and they had some very insightful questions which I hope I answered sensibly.

Other stuff in my head right now:

  • talking to people in Kent about how to connect with their project that is supporting development workers across the county
  • lots of detailed finance and reporting stuff on the BASIS-funded project I'm managing about embedding IT skills in the vol and comm sector
  • back to the Isle of Wight on Monday for more work on their IT volunteer recruitment campaign
  • trying to understand who's trying to carve up what from the Government's £1m requests for bids to coordinate a network of Digital Mentors - and how SCIP can be involved
  • publicising and organising the BASIS-funded event we're running on 15th December about how people learn IT skills
  • recruiting an evaluation consultant for the BASIS-funded Embedded IT project
  • planning the next sessions of the wordpress training for the residents of Coldean
  • learning my script as co-host of the Digital Media Awards in next Thursday night
  • planning SCIP's xmas do

Wednesday, 12 November 2008

How do you measure digital inclusion?

So tonight the Wordpress training starts at a library here in Brighton. We've designed a very simple opening session so that we can work out some basic stuff, including:

  • what are the skills of the group?
  • what sort of website do they want?
  • what sort of support will they need in the coming sessions.
I've set up a test site for the group to play with, as well as a Surveymonkey survey to capture some basic details about them. I'm hoping this will help us think about how this training is helping to tackle digital inclusion, so I've included questions about how much they use technology.

Questions include:
1. Tell us about your computer skills.
For each question please choose one answer from:
Never tried, Need some help, Comfortable, Do it all the time
  • Basic computer use - saving files, clicking folders, etc
  • Browsing the internet
  • Sending email
  • Using a digital camera
  • Viewing videos
  • Putting pictures or videos on websites like Flickr or Youtube
  • Running my own website
2. How often do you use technology?
Choose from: Never, Not very often, Every week, Every day
  • Mobile phone calls
  • Text messaging
  • Sending and receiving email
  • Surfing the internet
  • Working on my own website
  • Contacting friends or family through social websites
  • Posting videos or pictures on a website
There are other questions about what they like about the internet, their skills, and what they think are the barriers to people using new technologies.

I'll post up some replies once we've collected them but I wondered whether there any other suggestions for other ways of asking questions now which we can use to judge digital inclusiveness in the future?

Tuesday, 4 November 2008

How Can VCOs Learn the IT Skills They Need?

I’m working on a Lottery-funded project looking at ways of embedding IT training in other community learning activities. So we’re teaching budgeting but it includes training in Excel, or we’re teaching report-writing and showing how to use some of the features of Word. We’re holding a free event in December to discuss what we’re doing and share ideas about to help people learn the IT skills they need. Full details below.

** How Can Voluntary and Community Organisations [VCOs] Learn the IT Skills They Need?
A free event to share ideas, funded by the Big Lottery Fund through its BASIS programme.
    * What IT skills do you think staff and volunteers need?
    * What learning activities will help them acquire and make best use of those IT skills?
    * In what way will those IT skills make their work more effective?

WHERE:  Community Base, Queens Road, Brighton BN1 3XG
WHEN:   11.00am – 3.00pm, Monday 15 December 2008
HOW MUCH: Free of charge

* Who should attend?
    * Anyone interested in meeting the training needs of the voluntary and community sector
    * Anyone interested in how people learn IT skills
    * Anyone interested in better governance, planning, financial management or communications by voluntary and community organisations

* Embedding IT skills in the voluntary and community sector
SCIP and Working Together Project are developing and delivering a range of training to help organisations acquire the IT skills they need to address four key issues:
   * Governance
   * Financial Management
   * Communications
   * Planning

This is funded by a three-year grant from Big Lottery Fund under its BASIS programme and means we can look at how to embed IT training in other community sector training courses.

Our approach is to identify key tasks and then include appropriate IT training within existing courses. So we will now include Excel training as part of Budgeting and Fundraising courses, rather than just delivering standalone Excel training.

* Help us get it right
We started the project on 1 January 2008, so this event gives us a chance to tell you about our progress to date, describe the new courses we're developing and review feedback from the people we're consulting.

More importantly we're starting to plan next year's programme, so we're really interested in your views about how to deliver learning activities that help people make effective use of IT.

We're planning a highly participative event, to help you share ideas and to help us learn from your experience. It includes:
    * Introduction to us and our project
    * What can IT do for VCOs?
    * What IT skills does this require?
    * How will people learn those skills?
    * How can IT skills deliver more effective organisations?
    * What shall we measure?
    * What shall we try next?

Book now!
We're providing a free lunch so we need you confirm that you're coming.

To book a place please reply to this message, or contact Jane Hill at SCIP on 01273 234049.