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Tech for All: Moving beyond the Digital Divide: LITA Guides

Editat de Lauren Comito
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 feb 2019
How can libraries ensure that patrons from all socio-economic and ethnic backgrounds have access to advanced technology training and hardware? Everyone knows libraries provide access to computers and the internet for day to day use, but many libraries have gone beyond those basic services. Makerspaces and advanced tech training are often not equitably distributed between differing communities. The digital divide is still very real, and by not providing equal access to maker spaces and other similar services libraries may be unintentionally contributing to that divide.

This book examines how the unequal distribution of resources between communities can limit access to emerging technologies. Chapters from librarians across the country give real world examples of libraries going the extra mile to bring more than just email access to their communities, regardless of economic status or geographic distribution.

You'll find practical plans put forward by working professionals who have sought pragmatic solutions to issues of digital literacy. Access is a through line in this work as people look at the larger ideas of access as inclusive of training, diverse technologies, and the time and space to make genuine growth in tech literacy.

Chapters include:

working with immigrants, low cost laptops for library use, deep dives into the underpinnings of the maker movement, and developing community-focused technology training. After reading this book, librarians should have practical ideas to address the issue of equity in access to emerging technologies in their own communities.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781538122174
ISBN-10: 1538122170
Pagini: 202
Ilustrații: 24 b/w photos; 4 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 230 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria LITA Guides

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part 1: Identifying the problem
Introduction - Digital Equity in Libraries
Lauren Comito
Chapter 1: Fund All the Things: Finding Money to Do Great Work
Erica Freudenberger
Part 2: Physical Access
Chapter 2: Technology on the Border: Bringing STEAM-Based Learning and Digital Technologies to Southern Arizona
Emily Scherer
Chapter 3: Linux Laptops for Libraries
Alex Lent
Chapter 4: Shifting Focus Toward Imminent Needs: The Importance of Flexibility in Digital Literacy Training to Teens Within the Maker Movement
Ricci Yuhico
Part 3: Training
Chapter 5: Cracking the Code: The IMLS/Mozilla Web Literacy for Library Staff Project
Davis Erin Anderson
Chapter 6: You Can Do I.T.: Raising Tech Confidence and Competencies in Rural Texas
Carson Block, Cindy Fisher, and Henry Stokes
Chapter 7: Experiment, Learn, Respond at the Salt Lake City Public Library: The First Year of the Tech League Initiative
Tommy Hamby, Shauna Edson, and Elaine Stehel
Part 4: Makerspaces
Chapter 8: The Best Things Made in a Makerspace, Aren't the Physical Ones
Steve Teeri
Chapter 9: Library Makerspaces and Interest-Based Learning as Tools for Digital Equity
Lyndsey Runyan
Chapter 10: Improving Education with Library STEM Programs and Access to New Technologies
Maria Mucino
Part 5: Technology for Employment and Business
Chapter 11: Evolution of Community Services in Saint Paul
Rebecca Ryan and Pang Yang
Chapter 12: Creative Opportunity for All: Makerspaces for Youth and Adult Workforce Populations in an Urban Setting
Amanda Feist, Katrina Hartz Taylor, and Xenia Hernández
Chapter 13: Learning from Our Community - Using an Assessment Tool to Meet Patrons at the Point of Need
Amy Honisett, Gloria Jacobs, Judy Anderson, Jill Castek, Cindy Gibbon, and Matthew Timberlake
About the Editor and Contributors
Index

Recenzii

Even if your shelves are already stuffed with professional development titles, you should find space for this one. It's not another shopping list for your first makerspace or the same summary of computer basics you've already seen. Instead, Tech for All provides innovative ideas on topics like IT-centered training for library staff and methods to measure patron interest in potential tech offerings. It also includes sound advice on grant-seeking to fund it all. Clearly-written and exceptionally practical, the book also separates itself from the pack by addressing a variety of communities and demographics. The ideas here can be applied at libraries of all kinds, not just major metropolitan systems, and it doesn't neglect populations who are often overlooked when we talk about the digital divide. As solid a book on this topic as you're likely to find. - Craig Lefteroff
This short but sweeping edited volume, the latest title in the well-established "LITA Guide" series, contextualizes and expands on access as a concept to help evaluate the increasing digital service model of libraries. The chapters collectively demystify technology adoption and training in the context of patron-facing services, with detailed and helpful case studies responding directly to diverse community needs. Of particular note for their uniqueness and utility to practitioners are the contributions on identifying funding, and designing and implementing an assessment of patron digital problem solving skills. Although the case studies primarily document ongoing work in public libraries, the essays are easily adapted to other library contexts, making this collection a particularly valuable contribution to the profession. The editor has made a thoughtful selection of texts collectively emphasizing that providing truly equitable access requires librarians not only to understand their communities but to engage in their own continual professional development around digital literacies. Summing Up: Recommended. Professionals.
So many good ideas here! Comito and her team have created a great go-to guide of tech-forward ways to help libraries happily greet and engage with the 21st century. This is an exceptional collection of peer-tested tools and tips for libraries big and small wanting to work on digital inclusion.
Tech for All takes a fresh look at one of the most important issues facing both libraries and society: how do we seek equity of access and training to technology when economic equity escapes us? Both important and approachable, this book is a must-read for librarians, staff, board members, and anyone with a connection to how their local libraries could better serve those most in need.
Tech for All is a practical, shining example of a great how-to book. It concentrates on showing the reader multiple projects from start to finish with the results of each specific project, including how each of these projects engaged library customers and staff with the target technology. This book is not a "this is how you could do it" it is the more effective "This is how WE did it, and you can too." The success of the projects covered in the book can be the pebble that ripples in your community. Kudos to all of the project contributors and the editor.