Accessibility is an absolute for those with physical or intellectual challenges.
Today is Global Accessibility Awareness Day. And at no time has web accessibility and inclusion been more important for older people. Bloggers can learn from M365 May.
I took this photo of this Christmas tree two years ago at Christmas I took it from the top balcony at in November 2018 two years ago just a couple of years back at the Spanish City Dome.
Hopefully pretty soon this will be the three year of us again up at NTDF the three of us will be working at Park View Project again can’t wait until we get back to normal at Park View Project and NTDF.
In conjunctions with Master Card and The Good Things Foundation a campaign is launched to tackle digital poverty by those both ‘under-banked’ and those on the digital periphery. The aim is to confront the consequences of this latest pandemic by enabling more people to access the internet through digital ‘upskilling’ and access to digital items. Park View Project are a local centre based in Shiremoor, North Tyneside acting as a conduit in which this campaign can be felt at a local community level. Here are links providing details of the campaign and how this can make a difference to so many ‘starved’ of the variety of local support offered by having access to the internet. If you live in North Tyneside do let us know. https://fintech-alliance.com/news-insights/article/4195/mastercard-joins-leave-nobody-in-the-dark-campaign/financial-inclusion
This is a guest post from Anna Pilson. Anna is a PhD student at Durham University School of Education. Her ESRC-funded project aims to create a participatory action research model that positions children with a vision impairment as knowledge producers and change agents. She tweets as @pilsonanna. Now that the Covid-19 pandemic has radically altered the […]
Park View Project was created from a cry for help from older and disabled residents of North Tyneside who were frustrated, confused and, for many, in fear of using the internet because of the negative press relating to fraud, abuse, bullying and lack of privacy. Yet many older people are aware of the acceleration of digitization, but this only adds to the sense of being ‘outside looking in’. Does the public perceive this as a problem! It is not broadcast so it’s ‘unheard’ and ‘unseen’ by many agencies, organisations and businesses who, in turn, only reinforce this mind-set by assuming everyone has access to e-resources.
‘Starting as a volunteer steering group in 2013 we collected evidence about individuals not online and how this created difficulty in managing day-to day tasks. Adopting a traditional community development strategy to seek out solutions, we were able to reach out to those not online and attempt to gain an insight into the realities of ‘digital non-compliance’. The outcomes then are as now, which involves: –
Create a digital community which increases the online & Offline presence of vulnerable residents by providing a ‘voice which promotes community engagement.
Via Mentoring, promote sharing of skills, life experience and, reduce levels of social & economic isolation while increasing access to socially essential services.
Increase local opportunities for work, education, and leisure-based activities across the borough.
Reduce incidence of online bullying, fraud and Hate crime across all vulnerable groups across the borough.
Our aims are to tackle social & economic isolation; increase awareness & understanding of the applications that digital media can be used for and strive towards integrating life experience with that of learning 21st century digital services. Our proposal for developing a volunteer Online Chums service, alongside our active learning module, will address social and economic isolation which individual’s experience, including practical help in using everyday digital gadgets and their applications. Importantly, the social goal is to integrate our digital methods in a way that provides a community development tool which acts as a focus for promoting mutual support, ownership and, importantly, participation in local neighbourhood & borough-wide activities. In this small community we draw on volunteers from across our local community to take on a variety of roles such as digital mentoring (no special skills needed just people skills and commonsense); attending our outreach sessions (C19 emergency excluded); website design and content management; social media championing; updating contacts; promotion/marketing. We also welcome volunteers who enjoy online tutoring in a vast number of subjects – free – which engage people in a way that encourages inter-generational community-based activities. Central to all our work is a social one where we want to not just support to manage your online presence but increase social circles of support at a community level. You can register your interest in becoming a volunteer if you live in the North Tyneside area:
Our WW1 Heritage Lottery Group based at Cullercoats Family History Centre
Since our community organisation came into being we had access to a website provided by SocialEngine. Unfortunately over the recent months both technical and cost issues meant we had to make the difficult decision to mothball the this site and archive personal content. We are now faced with the challenge of securing a purpose-built option that addresses the accessibility features we have previously not been able to maximise for our members or to develop those safe areas where interactivity of users and project support providers could be nurtured or where a secure social space for vulnerable groups and individuals could share their life experiences in a rapidly changing technological world. However, funding is also an issue in that gaining traction in a competitive market where larger charities may have the level of infrastructure to develop donor relations, we rely very much on word of mouth and picking up local information about agencies/services wanting to support a focused approach to support people on the digital periphery. Crowdfunding is a possibility, but may not fit the limited scope of what we want to achieve, which is to support disabled folk young and old to develop strong community ties through inter-generational, community based activities using technology as the stimulus. Might any of our readers or members have some insights they would wish to share with us and help us forge our future goals? https://www.parkviewprojectne.com/
Following on from Mart’s blog about his involvement in this series of programmes depicting the way our digital project addresses the needs of those with intellectual challenges. This video feautures Marc Froggatt, Simon Schofield and Mart Lee, who are volunteer Online Chum Mentors working with others like themselves to guide them through using digital processes in a safe and secure way, especially when increasing their social circles of support. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-england-43798237/we-made-a-social-network-to-escape-trolls
This is another one of my favourite photos it’s me sitting where the news reporters tell the BBC News on the BBC One news at the BBC studios. This was took in September 2017 three years ago when I was thirty one. We all had a really good time at the BBC Studios it was a really good experience for all of us who were they it was great.
This is one of my favourite photos it’s from June 2008 when I was twenty one when I was in my early twenties when I was younger with all my friends from Voda Volunteering. The book launch was at Shiremoor Library with all my friends from Voda there and my mums side of the family and my dads side of the family to. It was a really good day and we all had a nice afternoon to.