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Links to Useful Resources
[Tools] [Education]
[Studies & Reports]
The following links have been useful to us so
far in grantwriting and other efforts. Please suggest
additional links that would be useful to computer centers and their
patrons!
Tools for
CTCs:
- America
Connects Consortium(www.americaconnects.net)
- "The America Connects Consortium is a collaboration of eight
partners and allied organizations, funded by the U.S. Department
of Education, who are working together to bring information, training,
technical assistance, public attention and new resources to community
technology centers across the country."
- Assistive
Technology Information/Devices/Training (www.independentliving.com)
- Information on computer training software and hardware devices
such as JAWS for Windows and JAWS for Windows tutorials. Programs
include multi-lingual speech synthesizers, cassette tutorials for
PowerPoint, Internet Explorer, Outlook, etc.
-
ATN-Lab Manual(www.unc.edu/atn/labs/manual.html)
- Here's an example of a very brief lab assistant's handbook.
-
Community Technology Centers Network(www.ctcnet.org)
- CTCNet is like C-CAN on a national scale. C-CAN is a member of
CTCNet.
- Community
Technology Review (www.comtechreview.org)
- An online newsletter with articles, resources and interactive
components related to the community technology field.
- CompuMentor(www.compumentor.org)
- One of the nation's leading nonprofit technology assistance organizations
- providing person-to-person services, low-cost software and online
resources to more than 23,000 nonprofits and schools since 1987.
- CTC
Center Start-Up Manual (www.ctcnet.org/toc.htm)
- First published in 1997, the CTC Center Start-Up Manual is widely
recognized as a principal guide for establishing CTCs and serves
as an organized patchwork of CTC experiences. With support from
the Surdna Foundation, the manual is being updated by CTCNet to
reflect developing CTC experiences and needs.
- CTCNet
Toolkit(www.ctcnet.org/toolkit/info.html)
- A toolkit of resources for community technology centers, which
will be freely available on CD-Rom and via the web.
- Grant
Writing Resources (www.techlearning.com/db_area/archives/WCE/archives/grantswt.htm)
- Web sites to help you write and win grants.
- Grant
Writing Tips (www.grantproposal.com)
- Aesthetics and technicalities for grantwriters. This site provides
free resources for both advanced grantwriting consultants and inexperienced
nonprofit staff.
-
MACREDO - Projects - Electronic Product Recovery
(www.libertynet.org/macredo/eprprj.htm)
- Interested in computer recycling? This site boasts two studies
about various options in the Mid-Atlantic states.
-
Surely Someone Knows how to Do This: Organizing Information Flows
of Community Technology Centers
(www.si.umich.edu/community/connections/findingsreport.html)
- This document presents the findings of a focus group study and
recommends the creation of collaborations like the C-CAN.
-
TechFoundation(www.imakenews.com/techfoundation/)
- a (free) monthly electronic newsletter called "TechGrants"
that alerts nonprofits to tech funding and product opportunities.
If you'd like to be a subscriber, see the website above.
-
Techsoup.org(www.techsoup.org)
- Powered by CompuMentor, TechSoup.org offers nonprofits one-stop
shopping for their technology needs.
-
Tools for Community Building(tcfreenet.org/org/tools.html)
- This page from Twin Cities Free-Net provides links to everything
from neighborhood mailing lists to management assistance to domain
name registration.
-
UC Handbook
(www.grinnell.edu/uclib/handbooks/labprocedureshtm.html)
- A very thorough list of expectations and procedures for computer
lab assistants in an academic setting (Grinnell College).
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Education
- Curriculum & Programming:
- AC4(www.ac4.org)
- Association of Christian Community Computer Centers has a good
collection of curricula. Some plans are youth-focused, but there
are many segmants applicable to any age. Click on "class materials"
under Curricula.
- Adult
Computer Basics Curriculum (www.rtpnet.org/comp/handouts/)
- These are five 2-hour courses aimed at adults who have never used
a computer. These handouts provide students step-by-step instructions
on how to get around on a computer, explore the internet, use hotmail,
write using a computer, and learn on their own.
- Adult
Education Tips & Strategies
- Strategies for adult technology education programs. Also check
out the Secrets
of Teaching & Learning: Scenarios document!
- ASPIRA(ctc.aspira.org)
- A community technology center in Washington, DC has useful resources
including curricula in Spanish and English.
- Deep
Discount Software (www.deepdiscountsoftware.com)
- This company sells discounted educational software. They have
computer training programs and videos. The selection and range is
larger than most other discount educational software companies offer.
- ESL
Curriculum (www.myefa.org/login.cfm)
- English For All is a free website to help adults learn English.
-
Free Education on the Internet(www.free-ed.net)
- This site offers more than 120 free courses in "vocational and
academic disciplines."
- GED
Preparation Resources on the Web (www.research.umbc.edu/~ira/GEDres.html)
- Links for both teachers and students in preparation for the GED.
The math section is especially strong and suitable for use outside
GED prep context.
- Latin
American History (www.tropicalamerica.com)
- Free online game that explores 500 years of Latin American history.
Conceptualized by Los Angeles high school students and artists,
this game exposes a rich and painful past forgotten and unknown
to the children of those who fled the region.
- Online
Training for Seniors (www.aarp.org/learn)
- The AARP online learning is an internet-based education program.
Short seminars or semester-long courses with teachers and experts.
Many are FREE, but some have a fee.
- PCTeachIt
(www.pcteachit.com)
- An online resource for integrating technology into the classroom.
Find activities, projects, games and tools that encourage hands-on
involvement from children of all ages.
- Practical
Money Skills (www.practicalmoneyskills.com/index.php)
- This site has tools for learning money skills aimed at youth and
parents, and it offers lesson plans for teachers. The information
is also available in Spanish!
- Pre-basics
Curriculum (cityofseattle.net/tech/infoage.htm)
- The Information Age pre-basics curriculum is an outreach tool
targeting low-income, senior, immigrant and computer-phobic communities.
It is available in several languages, including Spanish, Vietnamese,
Amharic, English, Somali, and Mandarin Chinese.
-
ScienceQuest(www.edc.org/sciencequest)
- ScienceQuest is an after school program, where kids between 10
and 14 years old engage in exciting science and technology explorations
in Community Technology Centers (CTC). ScienceQuest staff will train
CTC staff and volunteers to run 10 to 15 week projects with groups
of young adolescents that culminate in a team-developed web site
showing off what the team has learned. Application is due April
19th.
-
Tammy's Technology Tips for Teachers(www.essdack.org/tips/page1.htm)
- Look here for great lesson plans for teaching kids about word
processing, spreadsheets, multimedia, and the Internet, plus a lot
of other useful stuff.
- Tech
Learning (www.techlearning.com)
- Information and resources for technology teachers, coordinators,
and administrators.
- Technology
Tutorials (www.monroe.k12.la.us/mcs/training/)
- Website containing tutorials and resources for several technologies,
including: Windows, Macintosh, E-mail, Web Page Construction, Microsoft
Word, etc.
-
Tutorials Search Engine(findtutorials.com)
- This is more than just a site to learn about computers, it's a
site to learn about almost anything. Except shoe repair; I tried
that one.
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Studies
& Reports:
-
Closing the Digital Divide(www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/dn/index.html)
- This is the place to start if you're looking for official government
reports and statistics about the "Digital Divide" in the U.S.
-
Minneapolis Empowerment Zone(www.ci.minneapolis.mn.us/citywork/ez/)
- Most of the City's Web site is very upbeat and positive. This
part is an exception. If you're looking for statistics about how
bad poverty is in parts of Minneapolis, look no further than the
Empowerment Zone Application document.
-
Minneapolis Planning Department(www.ci.minneapolis.mn.us/citywork/planning/)
- This site contains a lot of useful information about Minneapolis,
including breakdowns of 1990 census data by neighborhood.
- Statistical
Report on Benefits of Instructional Technology (www.nsf.gov/cgi-bin/getpub?nsf03301)
- Article on how school math and science programs benefit from using
technology during instruction.
-
The Children's Partnership(www.techpolicybank.org)
- The Children's Partnership has just released "Bridging the
Technology Gap: Action Ideas for Cities and States." This onlineresource
is based on recent Children's Partnership research, which reveals
that enterprise and creativity exercised by leaders in a host of
places is resulting in positive and wide-ranging initiatives to
bridge the technology gap." The interactive heart of the site
is the section called "City and State Examples Most Relevant
to You." Choose among such categories as "Examples that
Redeploy Existing Resources" and "Examples that Focus
on Rural Needs" to develop your own ideas for "bridging
the gap." (From ACC-News: Issue 14, April 24)
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DIGTIAL
DIVIDE AND COMMUNITY TECHNOLOGY CENTER RESOURCES Reprinted from the CTCNet National
Conference 2001 Materials Archives
- American
Library Association(http://www.ala.org)
Within the ALA, the Office for Information Technology Policy acts
as the voice of the library community in Digital Divide policy making,
in promoting libraries as key stakeholders in Digital Divide remedies,
and in facilitating collaborative relationships between the public
and private sectors and ALA members, chapters, offices, and units.
- Closing
the Digital Divide(http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/dn/index.html)
Run by the Department of Commerce with updates and research about
the federal government's efforts to close the digital divide.
- Digital
Divide Network(http://www.helping.org/digital or http://www.digitaldividenetwork.org)
Spearheaded by the National Urban League and the Benton Foundation, this site serves as a portal
for research, media coverage, regional and local efforts, and current research on the digital divide. Numerous industry leaders are also
partners in this effort.
- The
Benton Foundation(http://www.benton.org)
Nonprofit organization that provides briefing materials and resources
to strengthen public interest advocacy in communications policy.
Host of several forums and listservs dealing specifically with technology
and young people.
- The
Children's Partnership(http://www.childrenspartnership.org)
National nonprofit strategy and policy organization working on behalf
of all children, especially those in low-income communities, to
ensure they can fully benefit from the opportunities of the digital
future.
- Community
Technology Centers' Network(http://www.ctcnet.org)
Network of over 450 community technology centers, CTCNet's site
contains links to the centers and resources in the community technology
center movement.
- Center
for Children and Technology(http://www2.edc.org/CCT/cctweb/)
Center whose goal is to improve education through research and technology
development. Its site contains information on its various projects
and research reports.
- Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights(http://www.civilrights.org)
Coalition of more than 180 national organizations committed to the
protection of civil and human rights in the United States. Examines
technology policy from a civil rights and equity persepective.
- The Morino Institute(http://www.morino.org)
Nonprofit organization that researches and funds projects that seek to demonstrate how the Internet can be used to help organizations and communities
achieve positive economic and social change, with a special focus on youth in the new economy.
- The Markle Foundation
(http://www.markle.org)
Foundation that focuses on projects related to communications, media,
and information technology. Its projects work to realize the potential
of these technologies and promote the development of communications
industries and targeted research that address public needs.
- The
National Urban League (http://www.nul.org)
Assists African- Americans in the achievement of social and economic
equality through advocacy and program services including community
technology and research.
- National
Telecommunications and Information Administration (http://www.ntia.doc.gov)
Federal agency that provides training, grants, information and research
to organizations that promote greater public participation in the
development of new technologies.
- Computers
In Our Future(http://www.ciof.org)
Statewide
network of community technology centers throughout California working
to increase technology training, access and job opportunities for
youth through program and policy development.
- National
Governors' Association(http://www.nga.org)
Association that acts as clearinghouse on issues of importance to
governors throughout the nation. Often sets and defines policy on
a wide range of issues, including youth.
- National
Conference of State Legislators(http://www.ncsl.org)
Organization that works to advocate for states and localities in
policy arenas. The Conference represents its collective membership,
performs research, and shapes policy positions on a wide range of
issues.
- OMB
Watch(http://www.ombwatch.org)
Organization
that monitors budget and government performance issues accountability,
government information access and policy and relevant nonprofit
policy issues. Of special note is their work on the digital divide
and information access issues in general.
- National
School Boards Association(http://www.nsba.org)
The National School Boards Foundation helps improve the quality
of public education for young people by investing in the adults
who make decisions on behalf of youth in public schools. They advocate
on behalf of schools and youth on issues and publish reports on
policy matters
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