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What do you do with your community IT centre

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The youth will come here and help in this centre with the games and the computer and all that. ... First, second, third generation Jamaican British ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What do you do with your community IT centre


1
What do you do with your community IT centre?
  • Community IT and its role in social inclusion
  • Biographical narratives from the IT hub on a
    large estate with multiple indices of deprivation
  • 4-year observer-participant, qualitative,
    ethnographic study
  • Thank you Jane Seale
  • All the participants at BLITZ
  • dont feel like Satan but I am the man Neil
    Young

2
Bluefield Lanes
  • Large 1960s social housing estate on the
    periphery of a medium sized city in Southern
    England
  • Population of 23,874, 18 of the citys
    population
  • Together with the adjacent estates in the Regen
    Arc nearly 1/2 of the citys population, 60,000
    people, live in areas where there are multiple
    indices of deprivation
  • Largest concentration of social housing in the
    city
  • High unemployment/underemployment and educational
    under achievement
  • The most significant issue is education, skills
    training attainment with two SOAs in the top
    third and ten SOAs in the top ten percent most
    deprived areas in England

3
But
  • Jo So maybe its not just the family centre that
    gave me that energy and that. I think its this
    place. Thats when I became more energised.
    Moving up here. Coming away from what Id always
    been brought up with, to coming here, where, you
    know Ive got that sense of belonging and my
    childs the happiest I think shell ever be.
  • Jean Thats good, because they tend to give this
    estate such a bad name and a lot of people are
    afraid to come onto it. Because they say where
    do you live and you say Bluefield Lanes and
    they aowwooh, how can you live up there.
  • Sandra Like you were saying about walking up the
    street you can walk from one place to another. I
    think that everyone can say that. Youre bound to
    run into someone you know and even if you dont
    know theyll all say hello, you know what I mean
  • Rosa If you go to other areas you dont really
    get that. People hate that. People in Bluefield
    Lanes because we are such a large community in
    ourselves and what we have here you dont get in
    other places.
  • 2008-08-01transcript.doc

4
And, on the other hand
  • Shona its like now how many years later down the
    line its kind of transformed itself to be true
    you know like the young people getting involved
    in a lot of drugs and crime and especially this
    whole knives and guns thing at the moment as well
    thats you know really scary You know its like
    for me how many more years is it going to be til
    actually those guns are out because everyone
    knows somebody in the city whos got some kind
    of gun or weapon you know what I mean, I dont
    care what anyone says somebody knows somebody
    thats got something you know and its just like
    because you know were not in London or
    Birmingham, youre not hearing gunshots every
    five minutes its only a matter of time.
  • 2008-07-04transcript.doc

5
And
  • Joven The community is not the way where people
    thought it was. A lot of changes have happened in
    this place it is no longer the place where youve
    say the criminals live or bad people, its not
    all bad people, theyre good people. This centre
    has helped to contribute to that. Because, I see
    it does have a youth IT hub. The youth will come
    here and help in this centre with the games and
    the computer and all that. And I believe this
    centre since it started has helped to improve
    what you you lay a standard of this community.
    So my story can be long but I also want to
    shorten it by saying that I have really seen,
    Ive benefitted and I believe the community has
    benefitted by people who have passed through here
  • 2008-07-24transcript

6
And
  • Marie So when I first moved on to , as I say I
    found the experience actually pretty stressful, I
    mean I was very delighted to have my own place as
    I said but I immediately encountered quite a lot
    of sort of anti-social behaviour, people were
    pulling up my garden and throwing stones at my
    windows and that kind of thing, random teenage
    behaviour I did kind of wonder about, you know
    moving here and how it would be
  • Ive never been around heroin addicts before but
    well, yeah kind of gatherings of them sometimes,
    Im not sure if I can make any judgment about
    that other than just sometimes theres quite a
    lot of twitchiness I suppose just suddenly brews
    up for one reason or another
  • 2008-11-24transcript

7
Gaps in knowledge
  • The life histories, experiences and voices of the
    users of community IT centres are largely absent
    from the literature
  • Users of centres are represented by synthetic
    descriptions and models of the problematic other,
    often culled from the analyses of research into
    the experience of centre managers and evaluation
    reports of various initiatives

8
Gaps in our understanding
  • In respect of adult community education policy
    there are gaps in our understanding of
  • the relationship between personal development and
    community development
  • the relationship between social capital
    development and human capital development
  • the relationship between lifelong learning and
    continuous retraining
  • and the relationship between an individuals
    responsibility for skills acquisition for
    existing jobs whatever they may be, and a social,
    collective responsibility for development in
    order to create new, worthwhile, forms of
    meaningful social and civic participation.

9
Research questions
  • RQ1 How do people, who associate themselves with
    the community IT centre, use that association to
    make positive changes in their lives?
  • RQ2 What factors shape people's use of and
    engagement with the community IT centre?
  • RQ3 What do people actually do with the community
    IT centre?
  • RQ4 What constitutes positive change in respect
    of people's life histories, identity and values
  • RQ5 What, therefore, are the policy implications
    for community IT centres?

10
Data collection
  • Biographic-narrative interviews Life stories
  • Narrative expression is closest to peoples lived
    experience both of conscious concerns and also
    less conscious cultural, social and individual
    presuppositions and processes
  • Surfacing mainly invisible experiences and
    contexts of issues that are difficult for society
    and individuals to confront
  • Grounding research in bottom-up practice
    (Barnat Walmsley, 2004)
  • Appreciative inquiry (AI) focus groups
  • the act of undertaking research has a
    transforming effect
  • needs-based approaches to community development
    tend to reinforce the circumstances of exclusion
  • explicitly avoids the discourse of problems
    allowing people to articulate an empowered
    discourse of alterierity
  • Participant observation diaries

11
Life stories
  • 10, stage-1 life-story sessions
  • Please tell me the story of your life, the events
    and experiences that have been important to you,
    from wherever you want to begin, up to and
    including the present time you as a
    user/volunteer/manager/tutor/friend of the
    Bluefield Lanes IT Zone

12
Focus Groups Learning lunches
  • 2 groups (6 10)
  • Appreciative approach
  • attempt to get beyond essentialism, ethical
    foundationalism and hierarchical ordering of
    identity politics (Gergen)
  • affirms a sensibility towards the inner
    dimensions of teaching and practitioner research
    that would include the imagination, emotion and
    passion involved in reflective practice
    (Luckcock)
  • part of an integrated approach to community and
    particularly community-driven development.
    interviews and storytelling that draw out ...
    positive memories, and on a collective analysis
    of the elements of success. (Mathie Cunningham)

13
Rules deciding factors
  • In making decisions about using the IT centre
  • Domestic family
  • Community positive, negative
  • Learning, education sophisticated understanding
  • of formal-informal, qualifications-learning
  • Work , civic engagement, caring not all about
    money
  • routes to employment depend only weakly upon
    qualifications
  • Feelings, emotion
  • confusion, envy, fatigue, fear, gratitude, guilt,
    happiness, hate, humour, loss, love, pride,
    respect, sorrow, success
  • Values
  • challenging wrongs, respect, making the best of
    what you got, trustworthiness, do what you love,
    integrity, learning together, determination,
    professionalism

14
Computers matter?
  • Interestingly computer use does not come up very
    much in peoples discussions about their use of
    the community IT centre!
  • Why?
  • Computers are just a part of life.
  • Computers are not that important to me
  • Using computers is fun
  • I need computers to keep up with my friends and
    family.
  • Computers are just about work
  • I hate computers
  • What does matter?

15
Demographics?
  • Variation and individuation is vast
  • Classification may inhibit understanding
  • Counting and dividing could be part of the
    problem
  • e.g. Black, African, Caribbean
  • Woman of African heritage, alienated from the
    much larger Caribbean community
  • African man, son of the Minister of Finance,
    alienated from his parents
  • African man, ex civil servant, retired to England
  • African man, refugee, journalist, ex-combat
    officer in liberation wars
  • First, second, third generation Jamaican British
  • White, Asian, East Timorese, West Papuan,
    Santhelenian, Serbian, Afghan, Yank and many
    others

16
  • Shona (African) Theres the black issue. The
    black issues always been an issue anywhere. I
    even remember when I was like 20 or 21 there were
    a lot of West Indians here and stuff so its kind
    of like they never really had a high opinion of
    Africans then. Do you know what I mean, then it
    was all kind of like, Im African. Im African
    quickly da da da. And if you try to say
    anything about the African ancestry, you know,
    its like, Im Jamaican! Im Jamaican! de de
    de! So you know. people just automatically
    assume that I am West Indian. They wont even
    consider the fact that Im African. They just
    straight-away assume that I am West Indian. And
    even down to the elders in the West Indian
    community Whos your mum and dad? You know
    like, You wont know my mum and dad.
  • 2008-07-04transcript.doc
  • Sandra (West Indian) English. Oh yes, I am
    definitely English.
  • 2009-06-04SandraRnd2

17
But
  • Jo In place it was all about cliques. It was
    all about fitting in with certain people. But,
    coming to Bluefield Lanes everyone just got on
    with everyone. Everyone had a sense of belonging.
    You werent just the white person or the black
    person. You werent the older person or the
    younger person. You were all together, all
    united. I had a strong sense of belonging after
    moving to Bluefield. I made really strong
    friendships and I still have them. And, I keep
    making more friendships through, thing IT hub,
    here.
  • 2008-08-01transcript.doc

18
People
  • Jean Black, British, Jamaican arrived as child,
    female, 50-60, community nurse
  • Alexandra White, British, 30-40, lone parent,
    community development officer, FD (MA)
  • Allen Black, British, 1st gen WI, 30-40,
    married (to head of English), youth worker
  • Angela White, British, single parent of 2,
    30-40, RGN
  • Anna White, British, 60-70, lone parent, serial
    employment travel, HND
  • Catherine White, English, 30-40, parent,
    part-time creche worker
  • Haidar Asian, British Pakistani, unemployed,
    lone parent, 40-50, electro-mechanical engineer
  • Jamie White, Irish, part time employed care
    worker, ex drugs, ex prison, 20-30
  • Jo White, British, female, 20-30, lone parent,
    unemployed
  • Joven Black, Kenyan, male, 60-70, retired civil
    servant, studying theology, BA
  • Marie White, English, 30-40, lone parent,
    counsellor
  • Matt White, British, male, 40-50, single,
    community development worker
  • Patricia White, British, female, 20-30, single,
    part-time adult community tutor, BA
  • Philippe Black, Ivorean, arrived as student,
    40-50, married, 2 children, PO clerk, MSc
  • Robert White, English, 50, single, unemployed,
    writer
  • Rosa Black, British, female, 30-40, 1st gen WI,
    British youth pentathalon champion
  • Sandra Black, British, 1st gen WI, 30-40, lone
    parent, unemployed, IT centre volunteer
  • Shona Black, British, African arrived (Zambia)
    as child, 30-40, lone parent, HND

19
Counting and dividing (tbc)Superficially
representative sample?Information emerged from
life stories
  • Gender
  • Female 11
  • Male 7
  • Colour
  • Black 7
  • White 10
  • Asian 1
  • Heritage
  • British 9
  • Irish 1
  • African 3 English??
  • WI 4
  • Pakistan 1
  • Age
  • 20-30 3
  • 30-40 8
  • 40-50 3
  • 50-60 2
  • 60-70 2
  • Employment
  • No
  • P/T
  • Yes
  • Retired
  • Other

The already educated continue to participate in
PCDL
20
  • Alexandra I was really kind of always having this
    dream about having some amazing job one day and
    never really actually having one. And I think
    that that happened because um I left school when
    I was 14 and I had like .. a bit like school
    phobia and I used to have panic attacks and not
    go into classrooms. And that was why I didnt do
    really well when I was at school. And then
    they got me on to an A-level course which I had
    to abandon because I was pregnant with my first
    child. So that was when I was 18.
  • and when I realised that I could not write a
    letter I felt quite awful I thought how can I
    ever be somebody that does jobs and works and
    stuff so um Its kind of interesting to remember
    that but I do remember sitting, sitting and
    staring at that screen thinking that I cant
    write this letter I really cant do that laughs
    Im useless, Im no good, Im never gona make it.
  • 2008-05-16transcript.doc

21
  • Philippe My sole purpose for being here was to
    study all the way to post doctoral level because
    my father, my father, this was how he seen things
    so I embarked onto a long project with
    financial support from home because that was
    tradition until I sent to him a letter and said
    to him look, I am a grown-up man, you have to
    understand that things arent as they were we
    suffered a heavy currency devaluation therefore
    there was no need for you to stretch your
    financial means and send me money not just that,
    I could fly by myself.
  • 2008-07-05transcript
  • Sandra I like working with people, I like working
    in my own community but kind of didnt have, had
    recent qualifications but didnt have any work
    experience so I kind of just volunteered here to
    pick up stuff, pick up and learn more stuff, so I
    kind of basically self-taught myself a lot of
    stuff I knew on computers but like I knew certain
    stuff but maybe didnt know the jargon , no
    didnt know the jargon actually but knew how to
    do it but if someone said to me Do you know how
    to do such and such?, Id be like no, but then
    Id see them do it and then Oh yeah, I can do
    it, but didnt know what they were talking
    about.
  • 2008-07-24transcript

22
Community learning
  • Community education is a small backwater in the
    Learning and Skills Sector
  • a vast and complex world which is restructured
    so frequently that it has become a full-time job
    just to read about the latest turns and twists of
    policy, never mind respond to them.
  • (Coffield 2006)

23
Funding policy
  • Adult Community Learning is not currently to be
    included in the demand led funding models
    although there is no clarity about what is meant
    by community learning (Slowey 2007)
  • Funding of Personal and Community Development
    Learning (PCDL) will remain outside these funding
    models for the time being. (Learning and Skills
    Council 2007)
  • Leitch Review of Skills has recommended that all
    publicly-funded adult vocational skills in
    England, apart from community learning and
    programmes for those with learning difficulties
    and/or disabilities, should go through demand-led
    routes by 2010. (Learning and Skills Council
    2007)
  • Note the collocation of community learning with
    programmes for those with learning difficulties
    and/or disabilities. The third leg of this stool
    is prison-based learning and the rehabilitation
    of offenders

24
Who is policy for?
  • Policy enacted not from concern for the excluded
  • except to the extent they can be reformed,
    remediated socially integrated through
    training
  • The principal audiences for policy are voters and
    employers
  • The excluded are
  • a social disorder cost to the taxpayer
  • a supply of compliant workers to an insecure
    labour market
  • People may therefore see themselves in the mirror
    of policy as problems to be solved for and by
    others, rather than agents of their own world

25
Voices
  • Shona The other thing I was going to say, I
    suppose, is that Im here but I dont know how
    much thats got to do with the IT Hub or even the
    learning champions.
  • 2008-07-04transcript
  • Sandra I like community learning because it fits
    around people and whatevers going on with them,
    you know what I mean. Universities and colleges
    are, you know this is what we got to offer, take
    it or leave it, whereas with the learning
    champion type of stuff weve been talking to
    people what do you want. It can be so varied,
    you know what I mean?
  • 2008-07-24transcript

26
Voices
  • Philippe See so it means what that these
    facilities can change peoples lives because I
    can testify for that. If I did not have these
    facilities well I wouldnt say that I would not
    have achieved this but how can I tell? Because I
    did not fail so how could I tell? If I did not
    have these facilities and I failed I would
    conclude, well because I didnt have the
    facilities then I fail. .. But I had the
    facilities and I made the best out of the
    facilities and I achieved this
  • 2008-07-10transcript.doc
  • Jamie Ive got a sister on the estate down the
    road as well who never really used computers, you
    know like from seeing me coming here shes
    started accessing this computer hub too.
    Eventually given my brother sorts himself out,
    you know, get him maybe on a couple of short
    courses here just to give him that self esteem,
    you know and you know its just that access to
    I think that the principle of that is the most
    important
  • 2008-11-21transcript

27
Voices
  • Haidar but you know, over here you wont find
    alcoholics and drinking in the IT Centre
    (laughs), its quite, you know, a very civilised
    community when I come here there is a bit of
    calmness in me this IT Centre is also like a
    safe haven for me, where I can come and (coughs)
    and maybe talk to someone about my problems
  • 2008-11-21transcript.doc
  • Jamie Ive got a sister on the estate down the
    road as well who never really used computers, you
    know like from seeing me coming here shes
    started accessing this computer hub too.
    Eventually given my brother sorts himself out,
    you know, get him maybe on a couple of short
    courses here just to give him that self esteem,
    you know and you know its just that access to
    I think that the principle of that is the most
    important
  • 2008-11-06transcript

28
Voices
  • Marie no internet at home I guess it was a
    money saving thing and then I was going to get a
    cable package, but then when I was heavily
    pregnant I had to get a new phone sorted out,
    basically it was just too much hassle to try
    getting out of my Orange contract and buying a
    separate mobile and then getting cable sorted
    out, so I sort of still dont have it.
  • And in the meantime Ive sort of been off on
    maternity leave and gone back to trying to be
    frugal so having the IT centre there has sort of
    stopped me having to get it.
  • Although I think, you know I will make that leap
    in the not too distant future just because while
    the IT Centre is absolutely great there are times
    when its you know obviously not available. IT
    access in the evening now particularly having a
    child. Rachel and the IT Centre together dont
    seem to mix very well.
  • 2008-11-24transcript

29
Voices
  • Sandra I got involved in Facebook quite recently,
    its only in the last eight weeks I think because
    everyones like You should get on Facebook, you
    should get on Facebook, but the people that said
    to me you should get on Facebook, they are
    addicted to it and they spend hours on it and Im
    just like, Im trying to stop the amount of time
    I spend on computers, Im not getting involved in
    Facebook because people spend a lot of time on
    there, my computer when Im at home, Ive got a
    work laptop and then Ive got my PC as well and
    my computer is on all the time, were playing
    games, Im really big on Sims 2, I play that all
    the time, so me and my son as well were game
    freaks, we play a lot of games and I keep setting
    myself these goals
  • 2008-07-24transcript

30
Voices
  • Robert it just occurred to me a few minutes ago,
    that I can remember being frightened by
    computers, not very many years ago. I can
    remember seeing people on TV using them, in drama
    or in documentaries or whatever, and it being a
    mixture of fear and an envy that they were using
    a computer and I wasnt, because it would be very
    useful. I mean years ago, a computer would have
    been very useful for me.
  • 2008-11-10transcript
  • Jamie So that was at the first point I starting
    accessing this centre and what it had to offer.
    So I was going for a court case, I was having to
    document phone calls, visits, you know for the
    first time in my life I was having to keep
    evidence for my own purposes Like I have got a
    daughter you know and I am constantly, you know
    Im coming here to email, to jolt the mother, you
    know like can your daughter, can your daughter
    see her real father now,
  • 2008-11-06transcript
  • Haidar she wants to come on Saturday to do
    homework, she wants to be part of the community
    team, while Dads doing his PC Maintenance
    Course, shes very keen to come and do her
    homework and really wants to know whats going on
    (laughs) so its, I think its a very good
    bonding station would I say where people are free
    to talk and exchange information and experiences
    (laughs) at times.
  • 2008-11-21transcript

31
Relationshipsmore than just the family or
community
  • Third spaces
  • Civic
  • Domestic
  • The space between, beyond, outside, ulterior,
    where identity projects take place
  • Freire practice-theory gt praxis
  • Foucault knowledge-power gt discipline
  • Bhabha oppressor-oppressedgt third space
  • Giddens collectivism-individualism gt third way
  • Voxpop civic-domestic gt bars, malls, sports

32
Tentative thoughts
  • Conceptualising community IT centres as places
    where formal education and learning takes place
    is at least problematic
  • Funding based on simplistic models of education
    may serve to embed social divisions
  • Seek community development or local economic
    development support not linked to educational
    attainment
  • Assisted or supported voluntarism may be a way
    forward provide facilities in a location where
    multiple agencies and social enterprises operate

33
CIC Research Impact!
  • The primary aim of the BLITZ Community Interest
    Company (CIC) is to develop digital literacy and
    reduce the effect of the digital divide for
    adults, by making available and promoting the use
    of CIT by providing a social learning space
    together with formal and informal learning and
    development opportunities.
  • Objectives
  • Free internet access
  • Formal learning opportunities
  • Computing for complete Beginners to Intermediate
  • Bridge to NVQ and ITQ
  • complementary offer

34
Thank you!
  • George Roberts
  • Southampton University
  • Oxford Brookes University
  • gbr_at_soton.ac.uk
  • groberts_at_brookes.ac.uk
  • 07711 698465
  • http//www.slideshare.net/georgeroberts/community-
    it
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