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Section Divider: Heading intro here. Fostering e-inclusion: the experience of UK online centres. E-inclusion survey…. Web pioneer. Beginner. What do we mean by e-inclusion?.

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  1. Section Divider: Heading intro here. Fostering e-inclusion: the experience of UK online centres

  2. E-inclusion survey…. Web pioneer Beginner

  3. What do we mean by e-inclusion? “The use of digital technology, either directly or indirectly, to improve the lives and life chances of all citizens and the places in which they live.” The goal is not to get people using technology, it’s about the uses of technology to impact on and transform people’s lives.

  4. The evidence • 17 million people in the UK not using computers and the internet: 1 in 3 adults • 75% of socially excluded people also digitally excluded • 50% of people without access to the internet are 65+ • 49% are in social class DEs • 75% are not working (inc retired and looking for work) • 28% are in social housing • 66% stopped at secondary school level (eg only 2% have a higher degree) • 86% don’t have children under 18

  5. Myths and reality about e-Inclusion • “The internet is a luxury commodity”… Technology is essential to economy and society eg 90% of jobs require computer skills and pupils with home internet access have measurable increases to exam grades. • “It’s just older people who aren’t online” The digital divide is not just generational – it’s also social. • Market forces will solve the issues No evidence that market forces alone will solve the issue. In the UK, internet growth plateaued between 2004 and 2006.

  6. 1 Width – the difference between the number of people included and excluded Depth – the severity/depth of exclusion 2 As some excluded people become included, the divide narrows. But this also deepens the divide – those who are left become more entrenched in their exclusion. The problem is both wide and deep..

  7. What do we need to do to foster e-inclusion? ACCESS • PROFICIENCY: • SKILLS + CONFIDENCE GOVERNMENT LEADERSHIP PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN THIRD/PRIVATE/PUBLIC SECTORS MOTIVATION

  8. Access: the UK picture • 6,000 UK online centres providing community access in libraries, pubs, charitable organisations, adult education colleges • Telecentre Europe • Government has just announced support of £300m to provide home access for disadvantaged school children and their families • More to be done: make internet access integral requirement for new housing

  9. Proficiency: the UK picture (adults) • Informal ICT training –little government funding available • Active voluntary and community sector taking lead • UK online centres provide informal support • Myguide – www.myguide.gov.uk – launched October 2007 and already has had more than 100,000 registrations • Media literacy: access, understand, create

  10. UK online centre user journey

  11. Motivation: the UK picture • Those who are digitally excluded often need help and support – community intermediaries crucial • Supported by national PR and marketing campaigns eg Get online day, Silver Surfers day. • Targeted projects e.g. Social Impact Demonstrator project

  12. Government leadership and partnerships • Digital Inclusion Minister • Cabinet Committee • Digital Inclusion Action Plan • National Digital Inclusion Conference • Partnerships starting to be formed eg UK online centres/Microsoft

  13. Impact on public policy • Adult education • e-Government: online public services • Social inclusion • E-democracy

  14. Research • Understanding Digital Inclusion (2007) • Economic benefits of digital inclusion (2008) • Social impact of digital inclusion (2008) Helping to build a compelling business case for digital inclusion

  15. Thank you Anne Faulkner Head of Policy and Business Development, UK online centres afaulkner@ufi.com www.ukonlinecentres.co.uk

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