Tuesday, 20 January 2009

Teaching Wordpress

The work with Coldean Residents Association is going really well. I'm working with Libby Davy to help them build a new Wordpress-based community website, through a series of short early evening workshops in Coldean Library. We did two sessions in November and are now planning to return to deliver more. They are planning the launch of their site and going great guns in putting together a test site which will then morph into the real thing.

To see what they've achieved take a look at the test site at www.douglascoldean.wordpress.com and watch a video I've posted which features interviews with three of the four protagonists.

This is pretty impressive for a small team of three volunteers and a part-time community worker. A key factor in this success is that the three volunteers have a complementary set of skills and interests and fit neatly into the roles we have suggested are needed to manage the site:

  • editor - someone to help manage and develop the overall themes and content of the site. Having the editor of the local newsletter is a perfect fit for this.
  • webmaster/mistress - someone to take a lead in technical issues, learning how to configure and adapt Wordpress and other relevant tools. The progress to date is very much down to one person's willingness and capacity to take the basic lessons we have offered and start creating a new site.
  • contributors - the third volunteer is chair of the residents associations and sites on all sorts of housing-related committees across the city. So as well as local information and events we have a chance to help amplify his voice and create new channels for local people to communicate with him.
The Community Worker has been very important in ensuring that we have the right mix of people. She is the person who first approached SCIP, asking for advice about building a site and she remains a key point of contact as the website group starts to form, and will be involved for as long as she is funded to be there. She works for the Trust for Developing Communities, based in Brighton, and demonstrates how community development is a vital component in successful community projects.

Leaving aside the usability of Wordpress, the role of the Community Worker is a critical ingredient so far. It provides some continuity for us and additional resource for the community, to help get these sorts of ideas off the ground and running under their own steam. She also happens to be enthusiastic about what were doing, and is asking very useful questions and helping to make sure the group keeps thinking about practical issues and not just playing with websites.

And the trainers? What are we doing to earn our keep?

I think Libby and I sing from a very similar hymn sheet, albeit in a slightly different accent. Our experience has been gained in slightly different spheres - mine more community oriented, hers more business and academic - but we have a lot in common in terms of our previous working lives. We also share a very similar approach to helping people to work with new communications tools and have complementary skills in terms of practical, technical and stylistic issues.

More soon...

1 comment:

Jason King said...

Hi Mark,

Following your blog with interest, now that lots of nonprofits are using or thinking of using WordPress, how we do training becomes more and more important.

Have you checked out the just-launched www.wordpress.tv site yet? Lots of training videos - really useful and up-to-date for version 2.7. I find them especially useful because I'm developing sites for organisations outside my own country and I can't easily pop round to deliver training sessions!

Plus, for developers, there are presentations from various WordCamps.

Jason King