View allAll Photos Tagged DigitalDivide
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
I enjoyed the contrast between the modern computer lab setup and grand old architecture of this hallway.
ConDev Intern Apryl Williams compares mobile phone costs in rural and urban parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
Texas A&M Sociology PhD student Apryl Williams spent over two months researching unequal access to the Internet and Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) in North Kivu during the summer of 2015.
28 November 2023, Chorsada village, Tajikistan. Candid portrait of 21-year-old Kibriyo Roziqovato(L) with her mother, Guljahon Gaurova (R) by the entrance of their home. Kibriyo Riziqova is a 4th-year law student at Dangara State University Law Faculty, who attended the first IT Training held in September 2023.
The UNDP Project “Supporting Women’s Legal Education (SWLE)” organized a two-day training on basic digital skills at the Law Faculty of Dangara State University—21 female first-year law students were invited to participate. It is the second out of three IT trainings scheduled for 2023.
During the two-day training, the students learn Microsoft Office, i.e. to create their CV; the internet and various search engines; create a Gmail account; how to use websites such as Youtube to learn new skills; how to save and archive their documents, photos, and scanned documents; PowerPoint Presentation; Zoom and Skype for online meetings; and how to handle misinformation, cyberbullying, and staying safe online.
The digital skills training for female law students at the Dangara State University was launched at the start of the academic year in September 2023 and is one of the project’s various activities. The IT training contributes to narrowing the digital gender gap by equipping female university students in Dangara with essential digital knowledge and skills, empowering them to be competitive candidates in the justice sector job market. Most female law students have never used a laptop, hence lack basic IT skills, and are attending this type of training for the first time—the IT training organized by the project to promote the digitalization of government services and the justice sector. The initiative highlights the need to address the digital divide among law students, particularly female students in Khatlon. This pressing issue was discovered during recent Project work. The training is designed to develop digital skills and will contribute to narrowing the digital gap and empowering law faculty students in Dangara. These new competencies will be useful during their university studies, prepare them for their professional careers, and increase their competitiveness when applying for positions in the justice sector.
GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT SWLE: UNDP Tajikistan launched its new Supporting Women’s Legal Education (SWLE) project, which provides training on key legal skills using international practices for law professors and female law students. Fully funded by UNDP, the groundbreaking SWLE project aims to address the gender gap in the justice sector in Tajikistan by promoting women’s empowerment by providing access to high-quality legal education opportunities and exposure to digital skills and international best practices for young women in the country. The project's ultimate goal is to increase the number of women in the legal profession and boost their representation in leadership positions. Currently, four national universities are involved in the project.
©UNDP Tajikistan/Freya Morales21-year-old Kibriyo Roziqovato(L) poses for a portrait with her mother, Guljahon Gaurova (R). Kibriyo Riziqova is a 4th-year law student at Dangara State University Law Faculty, who attended the first IT Training held in September 2023.
The UNDP Project “Supporting Women’s Legal Education (SWLE)” organized a two-day training on basic digital skills at the Law Faculty of Dangara State University—21 female first-year law students were invited to participate. It is the second out of three IT trainings scheduled for 2023.
During the two-day training, the students learn Microsoft Office, i.e. to create their CV; the internet and various search engines; create a Gmail account; how to use websites such as Youtube to learn new skills; how to save and archive their documents, photos, and scanned documents; PowerPoint Presentation; Zoom and Skype for online meetings; and how to handle misinformation, cyberbullying, and staying safe online.
The digital skills training for female law students at the Dangara State University was launched at the start of the academic year in September 2023 and is one of the project’s various activities. The IT training contributes to narrowing the digital gender gap by equipping female university students in Dangara with essential digital knowledge and skills, empowering them to be competitive candidates in the justice sector job market. Most female law students have never used a laptop, hence lack basic IT skills, and are attending this type of training for the first time—the IT training organized by the project to promote the digitalization of government services and the justice sector. The initiative highlights the need to address the digital divide among law students, particularly female students in Khatlon. This pressing issue was discovered during recent Project work. The training is designed to develop digital skills and will contribute to narrowing the digital gap and empowering law faculty students in Dangara. These new competencies will be useful during their university studies, prepare them for their professional careers, and increase their competitiveness when applying for positions in the justice sector.
GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT SWLE: UNDP Tajikistan launched its new Supporting Women’s Legal Education (SWLE) project, which provides training on key legal skills using international practices for law professors and female law students. Fully funded by UNDP, the groundbreaking SWLE project aims to address the gender gap in the justice sector in Tajikistan by promoting women’s empowerment by providing access to high-quality legal education opportunities and exposure to digital skills and international best practices for young women in the country. The project's ultimate goal is to increase the number of women in the legal profession and boost their representation in leadership positions. Currently, four national universities are involved in the project.
©UNDP Tajikistan/Freya Morales
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
28 November 2023, Chorsada village, Tajikistan. Standing in their living room, 21-year-old daughter Kibriyo Roziqovato(R) poses for a portrait with her mother, Guljahon Gaurova (L). Kibriyo Riziqova is a 4th-year law student at Dangara State University Law Faculty, who attended the first IT Training held in September 2023.
The UNDP Project “Supporting Women’s Legal Education (SWLE)” organized a two-day training on basic digital skills at the Law Faculty of Dangara State University—21 female first-year law students were invited to participate. It is the second out of three IT trainings scheduled for 2023.
During the two-day training, the students learn Microsoft Office, i.e. to create their CV; the internet and various search engines; create a Gmail account; how to use websites such as Youtube to learn new skills; how to save and archive their documents, photos, and scanned documents; PowerPoint Presentation; Zoom and Skype for online meetings; and how to handle misinformation, cyberbullying, and staying safe online.
The digital skills training for female law students at the Dangara State University was launched at the start of the academic year in September 2023 and is one of the project’s various activities. The IT training contributes to narrowing the digital gender gap by equipping female university students in Dangara with essential digital knowledge and skills, empowering them to be competitive candidates in the justice sector job market. Most female law students have never used a laptop, hence lack basic IT skills, and are attending this type of training for the first time—the IT training organized by the project to promote the digitalization of government services and the justice sector. The initiative highlights the need to address the digital divide among law students, particularly female students in Khatlon. This pressing issue was discovered during recent Project work. The training is designed to develop digital skills and will contribute to narrowing the digital gap and empowering law faculty students in Dangara. These new competencies will be useful during their university studies, prepare them for their professional careers, and increase their competitiveness when applying for positions in the justice sector.
GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT SWLE: UNDP Tajikistan launched its new Supporting Women’s Legal Education (SWLE) project, which provides training on key legal skills using international practices for law professors and female law students. Fully funded by UNDP, the groundbreaking SWLE project aims to address the gender gap in the justice sector in Tajikistan by promoting women’s empowerment by providing access to high-quality legal education opportunities and exposure to digital skills and international best practices for young women in the country. The project's ultimate goal is to increase the number of women in the legal profession and boost their representation in leadership positions. Currently, four national universities are involved in the project.
©UNDP Tajikistan/Freya Morales
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
ConDev Intern Apryl Williams digs deeper into her research on digital divide in the DRC: enrolling in computer classes, determining operating costs for facilities & conducting interviews.
Texas A&M Sociology PhD student Apryl Williams spent over two months researching unequal access to the Internet and Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) in North Kivu during the summer of 2015.
Darlene Williams, left, and Billye Wilson, right, are attending the Digital Literacy course. Both are unemployed and say they hope the class will get them get skills to make them more marketable.
More than 70 policy-makers, educators, community leaders and stakeholders convened September 13 to address digital inequity in North Carolina, focusing on the homework gap: the difficulty or inability of students who lack high-speed internet connectivity at home to complete homework assignments, compared to their classmates with access.
The North Carolina Department of Information Technology (NC DIT) Broadband Infrastructure Office (BIO) and the William Ida Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, at North Carolina State University, hosted the “2017 Homework Gap Convening.”
In regards to these terms, another way to defeat the divide would be to educate internet users on all of the capabilities and functions that the internet has to offer. (image source: motherboard.vice.com/blog/the-web-is-not-the-internet-you...)
Negative Pole is the BLACK wire goes to the longer branch of the JackPlug
- black
Positive pole is the RED wire
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.
www.odalc.org/donate - Since 2009, Oakland Digital, or ODALC, has been bridging the digital literacy and opportunity divide in Oakland, CA, and the San Francisco Bay Area, East Bay.
Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) works to increase digital literacy and opportunity among small business owners, local design students and entrepreneurs. In the 21st century, a constant point of contact between businesses and consumers is through the Internet, mobile devices and other digital avenues. Oakland Digital helps small businesses create new business models that will better reach customers. Through programs and classes we teach community college students how to turn their love for design into promising careers. Oakland Digital bridges the gap between passionate, multicultural business owners and budding design professionals and real world opportunities in a digital savvy age.
Learn more by visiting www.odalc.org and www.fb.com/odalc.
Photos copyright and courtesy respective photographer, photo@odalc.org for details.