15 years ago
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Technology and Out-of-School Time
There is a great deal of information out there through various media. We hear about newspapers being shuttered while also the ascendancy of new forms of communication that not only replace the paper format, but redefine how we communicate and construct knowledge.
That is not to say that the only thing we are constructing is knowledge. There is a great deal of clutter and with each advancement in communication, there seems to be an equal advancement in people's ability to turn something good into yet another stream of trash. The academic papers and open discussions of the Internet became chat rooms and.... pictures of questionable taste. E-mail became SPAM. Viral ideas, became viruses and Trojans or other malware. "Maleware" became a word.
Some react to these forces with a heightened sense of danger. Filter, restrict, create hoops to gain privilege to the network - and this is program staff not an attitude to children or youth. Others have taken the everything new is a new opportunity and jumped further and further to the "bleeding edge" (beyond the "cutting edge" for those of you old enough to remember proper grammar). Some organizations have unloaded millions of hard-raised dollars for web pages, search features, and Java script and encouraged others to "join the digital age." However, the non-profit sector in general and Out-of-School Time in particular seem to have not found a way to raise themselves above the clatter, hold on to a certain amount of control while realizing that new-technology redefines host and user content and may offer a more transparent window into their work - whether they like what outsiders are seeing or not.
Out-of-School programs are slowly coming into the digital age - as are training providers, OST researchers, and other supporting institutions as organizations jump in often using models applied by the corporate world or from personal experience (the hey, I use myspace with my friends so....). This topic will be explored at an upcoming Boston Roundtable organized by BOSTnet Thursday May 7th from 9:30 - 12PM at the Boston Public Library. If you would like to discuss what you do to promote your organization, meet funder needs, or integrate technology into what you bring to children and youth, please attend and be prepared to visit your website and tell others about how this or that aspect of technology captures an audience - or you feel drives away community.
Over ten years after the dot-com bubble/boom/bust, we continue to ask ourselves, is Twitter really going to help us? and then Twitter that exact message so our friends all know what we're doing now is wondering.
For more information on the May 7th Boston Leadership Roundtable or to participate go to www.bostnet.org.
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