Google Fiber names local duo as digital inclusion leaders
August 16, 2016 | Kat Hungerford
After a successful first year, Google Fiber — in partnership with the Nonprofit Technology Network — has announced its second round of Digital Inclusion Fellows.
As part of the program, fellows will create and lead digital literacy efforts in the 11 metro areas with Google Fiber, including Kansas City. Initiatives include assisting adults with high school equivalency preparation or GED online, helping job-seekers learn digital workplace skills and teaching parents how to digitally access their children’s grades.
In its first year, the Kansas City fellowship made significant inroads in digital literacy efforts, according to Google Fiber. Fellows Eze Redwood and Leslie Scott trained more than 620 residents on basic computing skills through Literacy Kansas City and the Full Employment Council, respectively. Fellows also trained staff and volunteers to become instructors.
This year, Kansas City’s two new fellows are Sarah Bell from Literacy KC and Wendy Pearson from the Kansas City Public Library.
These programs, along with the rest of the fellowship, will be supported by Google Fiber’s allocation of roughly $1 million to cover initiative expenses and fellows’ salaries.
Kansas City especially faces a larger challenge to increase digital inclusion. Kansas City, Kan. is the seventh least connected city in the U.S., and across the Kansas City metro, 70 percent of students have no internet at home, according to Connecting for Good.
The announcement of the program’s newest members coincided with the release of its first digital inclusion toolkit, which features case studies from three Google Fiber metros, along with suggestions and resources for increasing digital literacy beyond the fellowship.
Each community and organization that worked with the Digital Inclusion Fellowship met different objectives, according to the fellowship’s senior digital inclusion manager Leana Mayzlina, but there were many common findings and challenges.
Mayzlina noted in the toolkit an array of issues affecting the success of its efforts, including integrating digital literacy, assessing community needs, identifying partners around digital literacy and building awareness.
Featured Business
2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Startup Little Hoots working with Today Show, Huffington Post
Kansas City-based Little Hoots has scored two high-profile partnerships that are scoring its memory-saving app thousands of additional downloads. The tech firm is working with the Today Show and the Huffington Post to provide snippets from its memory-keeping platform that captures youngsters’ memorable quotations to share with friends and family. “Whenever they publish one of these Little Hoots…
RECAP: 1 Million Cups panel offers decision-making advice
Three entrepreneurs took the stage at 1 Million Cups this week to offer advice on navigating the tough world of entrepreneurship. Alex Altomare, co-founder of BetaBlox, Linda Buchner, co-founder and president of Minddrive, and Ben Kittrell, co-founder and CTO of Doodlekit, all spoke about the variety of hard choices entrepreneurs face. On handling tough decisions……
Sprint Accelerator startup raises $85K (and counting)
Hidrate, a startup at the Kansas City-based Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator, rapidly surpassed its fundraising goal before a pitch to investors and nearly 2,000 Kansas Citians. The Minneapolis-based company’s Kickstarter campaign has already raised nearly $85,000 in two days, which more than doubles its goal to fundraise $35,000 in 42 days. Hidrate created a Bluetooth-enabled water bottle that tracks…
Sprint Accelerator Demo Day preview (part III)
The second class of the Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator is gearing up for its much-anticipated Demo Day, which serves as a culminating event and is expected to draw a crowd of nearly 2,000 people. Led by Boulder-based Techstars, the Kansas City-based accelerator is now hosting 10 mobile health tech startups from around the world for its…