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B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY – AN OVERVIEW
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B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Feb 27, 2022

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Page 1: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY –AN OVERVIEW

Page 2: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Hosted by Supported by

• State Library of

Queensland

• Telstra

• Centrecorp

Page 3: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

MC and Facilitator

Heron Loban

Welcome to CountrySongwoman Maroochy Barambah

Page 4: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

The IFD in a nutshell

• 64 participants• 16 presentations• 3 Facilitated workshop

sessions on:• Obstacles – Identified key

obstacles to digital inclusion

• Solutions- Proposed targeted strategies and projects

• Advocacy Plan - Developed three big ideas towards a plan to promote Indigenous digital inclusion

Page 5: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Some key themes

• Remote Indigenous communities remain the most digitally excluded population in Australia• Major obstacles are affordability

and access, as well as cyber-safety, security and skills• Locally relevant projects,

content and applications are the key to engagement

Page 6: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Some key themes

• It’s about people and relationships, not technology• Partnerships and

knowledge sharing are key enablers• Digital mentors needed to

increase skills and awareness; a new job in communities

Page 7: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

A Snapshot of the Presentations

Page 8: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Keynote AddressHon. Leeanne Enoch, Minister for Innovation, Science, and Digital Economy

• Correlation between internet access and income and age

• Digital exclusion is a form of discrimination

• We risk creating a digital underclass

• Digital skills are critical to the future of young people

• Coding is a new language that kids need to know

Page 9: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

KeynoteHelen Milner | Chief Executive, Tinder Foundation

• Building a network of digital champions and partner orgs• Personal

relationships are key- its about people not technology• How to lobby- one

simple message, have stats and case studies

Page 10: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Creating social, economic and cultural opportunities

for Indigenous Australians through connection

Lauren Ganley, Telstra Indigenous Directorate

• Outlined Telstra’s digital inclusion research and projects • Importance of partnerships

for digital inclusion projects• 4 key roles of partners:

Expertise, Access, Resources, Innovation

Page 11: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

National Year of Digital InclusionNatalie Ahmat, NITV presenter/producer/journalist and Digital Inclusion Ambassador

• Outlined the GoDigidigital literacy project with InfoXchange and Australia Post • Key audiences: ageing,

CALD, regional/remote, Indigenous, small business• Mentoring is key to

inclusion

Page 12: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Critical Digital- A digital journey towards digital empowermentLeigh Harris, Ingeous Studios

• Create opportunities to optimise the digital world

• Importance of Indigenous ownership

• Promote Indigenous business and income generation opportunities

• Need a national code of conduct for Indigenous digital programs

• Not siloing of ideas- go for global reach

Page 13: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Indigenous Leadership Research

Mary-anne St Clair, AMSANT

• Relevant models of leadership in a cross cultural context• Aims- empower

Indigenous health and education leaders to inform practice• Need collaboration

to build local ownership

Page 14: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

The CAT Mobile Phone Hotspot ProjectAndrew Crouch and Aaron Bolger| Centre for Appropriate Technology

• Focuses mobile coverage using a passive satellite dish concentrator

• Practical technology to meet a real need

• Increases mobile coverage area by four times

• A good example of Indigenous employment and collaboration to expand telecommunications access

Page 15: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Cyber safety for remote Aboriginal people –different issues, different strategies?Ellie Rennie | Associate Professor, Deputy Director, Swinburne Institute for Social Research

• Access to internet is not the only obstacle, also online safety and cultural issues

• Some communities don’t want mobile

• Devices aren’t designed for sharing

• Communities are seeking local solutions to address cyber-safety

• High cost of using some mobile chat apps

Page 16: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Remote community surveys: technology, dirt roads and local ownershipIona Matthews and Susan Locke | Indigenous Remote Communications Association

• Surveys provide important evidence for advocacy• Logistical, cultural and

technical challenges of doing surveys in remote communities• Need local people

involved to make it work

Page 17: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Yulngu. The Land. The art. The experience. Every day!Glenn Bird | Managing Director, Indigenous Communications Group Pty Ltd

• Outlined the Yulngu art sales app• Example of

creative Indigenous entrepeneurshipand innovation

Page 18: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Digital Inclusion in a community context Michelle Williams and Paul Sutton | Director, Digital Learning Futures

• Wingellina case study- life skills and ICT co-exist• Project-based: ‘Just

in time’ learning, not ‘just in case’• Importance of

building a digital mentors system

Page 19: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Community public wifi hotspots in Ali Curungand AtitjereJennifer McFarland and Leyla Iten | Central Australian Youth Link Up Service

• Video of community voices about impact and issues of internet and social media

• Issues- bullying, jealousing, wrong way talk, violence

• Community models of managing WiFi access and download limit

Page 20: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Co-creating knowledge to transform livesNickeema Williams | Community Connector, Hitnet

• Described HitNetkiosk network in 70 sites for sharing health and education videos• Now includes local

community content and WiFi access• Promote local stories

and events

Page 21: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Remote Library Services in the TerritoryAnja Tait | Assistant Director Libraries and Learning, Northern Territory Library

• Good news- NT Govt to provide WiFi in 46 remote communities (12 new ones) as a library service

• Community is at the centre

• Work with local partners• Projects- NTLanguages

App, Keeping Culture• Libraries support digital

citizenship for all

Page 22: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

State Library of Queensland Indigenous Library ServicesCynthia Rowan | Executive Manager Indigenous Library Services, State Library of Queensland

• Partnering with 12 Indigenous Shire Councils with IKC network

• Tailored services to community needs

• Coding and robotics workshops

• Connected collections access in Torres Strait sites

• Video on Ideas Box in Kowanyama and Mapoon

Page 23: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

kuril dhagunAmanda Hayman | kuril dhagun Manager, State Library of Queensland

Physical space in library- co-created exhibitions, public programs, welcome wallInvolves Indigenous community projects and online content Communities need infrastructure to access content

Page 24: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Big idea 1

A Universal Service Obligation underpinned by a set of principles (culturally appropriate, based on community need) to provide a minimum standard of internet connectivity as a human right in Australia to put Australia as a leader in the digital innovative space globally

Page 25: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Big idea 2

Digital inclusion is a human right: Build Digital citizenship through free (unmetered) and appropriate access for all Australians, however remote, to essential online services and the skills and support to access them; It’s not about the technology, its about people.

Page 26: B4B INDIGENOUS FOCUS DAY 2016 – AN OVERVIEW

Big idea 3

$60 million would support Indigenous digital inclusion in 300 communities for 2 years - employ digital inclusion worker to provide training and technical support in media centres to build community capability and digitally empowered people.