Click here to follow the Knight Center of Digital Excellence on Twitter.

According to a Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project study, "The Mobile Difference," nearly 40 percent Americans have positive and improving attitudes about their mobile communication devices, thereby further immersing themselves into a more robust digital lifestyle. Read more

We'll find answers to as many of your questions as possible and publish answers in a future issue.
Ask Us

Multimedia:



How will broadband affect burgeoning controversies over health care? The answers to this question and more came courtesy of a Broadband Cenus-hosted, hour-long panel discussion. View a video of the discussion. View Now




President Obama on Innovation and Sustainable Growth. President Barack Obama has new plans to strengthen the economy that will all favor people with hi-tech educations.
View Now




Elevate Miami, a comprehensive Digital Inclusion program launched by the city of Miami, aims to serve youth, low-income families, minorities, seniors and residents facing barriers to digital inclusion.
View Now




The Knight Center of Digital Excellence held its first Stimulus Webcast Session for Knight communities and program directors July 23. Watch it online now.
View Now




By pushing hard on broadband, lawmakers hope to close the "digital divide" that has long separated rural America. In doing so, they hope to give rural consumers access to the same sorts of high-speed services and opportunities - think telemedicine, distance-learning and Web-based commerce - that city dwellers have enjoyed for years.
View Now




Posts Tagged ‘Cuyahoga County Public Library’

Case Study: Broadband & The Digital Divide: The New Role of Public Libraries

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

In Northeast Ohio, the Cuyahoga County Public Library System (CCPL) has established a new beachhead for bridging the digital divide. After five years of experimenting with ultra-broadband and integrating it into the library’s menu of services, CCPL is now known across the country as a pace-setting library system and an early innovator in ultra- broadband applications for servicing the public.

For communities all over the country, the public library – often the only agency offering free access to Internet-based services – is playing an increasingly relevant role in helping to bridge the digital divide. The opportunities for impact are profound, however the challenges are numerous: Access to funding and bandwidth are critical ingredients for responding to rising public need and demand, and the ability to effectively track impact remains elusive. Yet for populations across the country, having digital access, or not, may also mean: Acquiring new skills or not. Learning English or not. Applying for a job … or not. In these times of national economic stress, the role of public libraries in the digital-divide equation may be more critical than ever.

CCPL’s experiences provide lessons for pursuing a broadband vision that can impact the digital divide in communities around the country. In the wake of CCPL’s advances in Northeast Ohio, a new threshold of innovation has dawned, and for public libraries nationwide, so has the opportunity to serve as beacons of hope to the millions of Americans in danger of being left behind in the digital divide.

For a thorough analysis of CCPL’s experience, download “Broadband & The Digital Divide: The New Role of Public Libraries,” a case study supported by the Knight Foundation.

Appendices:

Appendices A to C
Appendix D
Appendix E
Appendix F
Appendix G
Appendices H to I

For libraries, it’s high-speed ahead

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Sari Feldman A view from Cuyahoga County Public Library

While the transition from an analog to a digital age has been apparent, we might not have realized how quickly our world would change. Now, especially for those in public service, we need new models to catch up with the demands and challenges of a digitally-driven social and economic environment.

At Cuyahoga County Public Library (CCPL), we started down this path early, due to our connectivity, since 2003, empowered by an ultra-broadband network in and around Cleveland. It remains one of the most advanced in the nation for mass distribution of images, sound and information over the Internet.

One thing we’ve learned at CCPL is that with limited financial resources, we must leverage available assets through effective collaboration. We hope our experience and lessons we’ve learned can be of value to other communities. Here are a couple of the key points we can share about the role of public libraries as a catalyst for improved social and educational services to people of all ages:

• Libraries indeed play a role in overcoming the digital divide, by providing Internet access to the public as well as support services. But that’s not all. Libraries are also uniquely positioned to offer Internet-dependent services to everyone. Our experience at Cuyahoga County Public Library (CCPL) is that by connecting to academic and cultural institutions, we’ve introduced a new approach to learning that brings new educational, job training and social opportunities to all.

• Instead of overbuilding fiber infrastructure, libraries can serve as the hub for taking Internet connections to schools, community centers, legal clinics, healthcare facilities, churches, and other places. One approach, to cut down on the high cost of laying fiber, is to allow Internet service to be delivered via radio waves.

By drawing on Greater Cleveland’s existing fiber network, and extending its reach through creative approaches, CCPL now relies on broadband as a way to advance its top priorities, including reading readiness for young children, supplemental programming for school-age children, job training for unemployed workers, services for new Americans and programs to keep older adults happy, healthy and independent.

An example is our summer camp program. In one offering, called Shipwrecks Camp, for 12- to 15-year-olds, kids experience underwater exploration, via Internet, with Titanic discoverer Dr. Robert Ballard. The program also receives support from the Center for Science and Mathematics Education at Case Western Reserve University and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources-Cleveland Lakefront State Park. Shipwrecks Camp drew 589 participants in 2008, having doubled in size in only two years. It is positioned for further expansion this summer.

Another example, involving similar collaboration, is a program that brings arts programs to neighborhoods via broadband. Older adults, especially, can participate in tours of the Cleveland Museum of Art, or see shows from Cleveland’s Playhouse Square, via interactive connections from their local libraries.

At CCPL, the need for high-speed communications is constant for us. It’s also constant for anyone who wants to participate fully in the social, economic and educational opportunities of the future.

Libraries can be part of the solution, both as a hub for the delivery of Internet service, and also as a catalyst for bringing community organizations together to offer previously unimagined opportunities to all.

Sari Feldman is executive director of the Cuyahoga County Public Library and president-elect of the Public Library Association, which is a division of the American Library Association.

Libraries: A bridge over the digital divide

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

The Knight Center of Digital Excellence offers the following article as an occasional look at one program at a time on how broadband intersects with the work of libraries, schools, colleges, government and community organizations.

The Cuyahoga County Public Library consistently ranks as one of the nation’s busiest library systems. Last year, it ranked 7th in the nation in the volume of materials circulated – with 17.8 million items, mostly print books, checked out by patrons.

We’re not talking about New York City, or Chicago, or Los Angeles. We’re talking about a range of low- to high-income communities that surround Cleveland.

If library usage is a measure of a literate society, then it’s worth looking closer at Cuyahoga County. Here, you’ll find not only innovative programs, but programs that could not exist without Internet access – and in some cases, not without high-capacity Internet enabled by a fiber optic network in and around Cleveland, one of the nation’s largest fiber hubs.

To look at just one initiative within the Cuyahoga County Public Library (CCPL) system, a good place to start is with the summer camps that are now about to begin. Of six top priorities identified by the CCPL, one is to help youths reach their maximum potential. The summer camp initiative is one of several programs intended to advance this goal.

CCPL’s summer camps began in 2006, with 1,126 students participating in programs at five locations. By 2008, participation had more than doubled – with every program, since the inception, requiring Internet access for each child. This year’s program is set up to accommodate an attendance of nearly 8,000, in anticipation of continued rapid growth.

For recording keeping, participation in CCPL’s summer camps is measured by the number of days any one child attends a day of camp.

In some cases, such as in the Shipwrecks Camp with Titanic discoverer Robert Ballard, the offering could not exist at all, but for the availability of a super broadband network such as the Cleveland area has.

Here is a sampling of different camp programs and the growth in each that is tied to educational goals, with Internet literacy as a consistent component.

Shipwrecks Camp: Via high-speed Internet, 12- to 15-year-olds at various community locations, including libraries, are involved with hands-on activities that focus on underwater exploration with Ballard. Last year, youths observed the role of robotics in under-the-sea explorations and then experimented with various miniature robots.

This summer, there will be 26 camp locations in all. To accommodate growing demand for such offerings, new programs have been added in Lego Mindstorms robotics, Lego Simple Machines, digital animation, 3-D digital modeling, media arts, inventive thinking, career exploration and entrepreneurship.

New programs this summer that rely on high-speed, high-capacity Internet service include:

Digital Animation Computer Camp: Here 7- to 12-year-olds learn the basics of using objects, colors and sounds to create online characters. Students also learn to add story lines and stream figures into cartoons.

3-D Digital Modeling Camp: Two separate 3-D modeling camps are being offered, teaching 3-D modeling through the building of video games, cars, homes, airplanes and a version of Disney Land.

Video Game Creation: This camp for 13-17 year olds teaches students how to program and design their own video games.

Media Arts: Students learn to create a website, a recorded piece of original electronic music, and an original digital stop-motion video.

Among returning media-oriented programs:

BAG It! Build Arcade Games: Offered at one branch, this program allows students to design, create and edit their arcade-style video games. They determine the action, characters and game objectives and outcomes..

Even camp programs with a less technical, more traditional focus depend on Internet access, and require laptops for participants to use daily. Such programs include Club Cuyahoga, offered at two locations and aimed at 9- to 15-year-olds. In one of the offerings, for 9- to 10-year-olds, retired NBA player Jim Chones and his staff help students develop character and life skills through a variety of arts-based activities.

In another, 11- and 12-year-olds can learn about astronomy, math, science, gardening and more with staff from Cuyahoga Community College’s Tri-C for Kids program. In still another, Jim Chones’ and Tri-C staff jointly present leadership training for kids 12 – to 15-years-old, with a focus on developing personal leadership plans, communication skills and team building.

Commented CCPL Executive Director Sari Feldman in a recent conversation about the summer programs: “The need for high-speed communications is constant for us.”

CCPL is able to offer these great programs and make such an impact with Northeast Ohio students thanks to partnerships with organizations and institutions from across the region. And all of these programs are free – which makes the case for why libraries matter in the work of bridging our nation’s digital divide.