Posts Tagged ‘digital youth work’

How Will Youth Work Use The Web in 2009?…

November 27th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

You can see some thoughts from a few people in the slides and have a listen to DK’s hopes in the film about how Youth Work will use the web in 2009.

Thanks to Adam Sibley, Adam Fletcher, Carl Haggerty, DK and Tessy Britton for bravely putting forward their predictions/ideas/hopes. I say brave because of course in a years time we’ll be able to look back and see how close to the mark we were!

Overall there’s a sense of hope that Youth Work better embraces the web next year. I’ve slightly countered that with my more cynical prediction that still next year youth work in general will be slow to embrace the web. I started an online network for what was then the Young Movers programme in 2003, at that time internet access was a real issue for many of our young volunteers but even those without home access felt it was the best solution for being able to have a more ongoing relationship with us while back at their homes in various parts of the country. I felt then that what we were doing was maybe a couple of years ahead of the pack and that soon an online element would become normal.

Well 5 years later and things haven’t changed much! Except that young people are using the web prolifically - the social network explosion has integrated the web into young peoples normal social lives, but for all manner of reasons the services working with young people have largely been left behind.

I agree with DK’s thoughts that there needs to be so much more to developing the use of the web than trying to jump on board the social network train. For one thing the use of social networks is likely to change radically very quickly - my own prediction here is that there will be much more of a move towards open networks that allow people to take their data wherever they like and quickly move between networks instead of having all their films, photos etc. tied into facebook. If so this will provide some interesting possibilities for youth services online along with a few more challenges to overcome.

The use of twitter is mentioned a couple of times. This was something we’d considered with plans for OnTheUp - the idea of being able to get an instant evaluation from young people involved in projects is very appealing. I don’t think though that twitter is the solution to this though, at least not until mobile providers provide a free data plan as standard for mobile phones. What I can see happening is that it surely can’t be long before mobile phone services integrate sms, twitter and msn/instant messaging into one universal service - if this happens the instant evaluation idea could quickly become a reality, although there will still be the challenge of getting young people to be willing to do so (which may not be so difficult depending on how you approach it).

Despite my cynical ‘not much will change’ prediction I really hope they do - in fact I’m relying on it! I’m planning to throw myself into developing digital youth programmes in the new year and am very aware that as things stand there won’t be much of a take up. What I’m hoping is that as people like DK and Tim Davies spread the word and continue to inspire youth workers out there to explore the web I’ll be able to build on this and provide some nicely structured ideas for using the web in creative ways towards personal development and community involvement - so I really hope youth work does embrace the web next year!

So thats our thoughts - if you have your own predictions or have thoughts on other peoples please do add them in the comments.

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Online Youth Work - Parental Involvement & Awareness?

November 12th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

I’m turning my attention to developing an online space for easier collaboration for the Digital Youth Work programme. Something I started thinking about earlier though is whether there should be consideration to parental involvement and/or awareness and if so what would that be?

This stemmed from me thinking that aspects of the Digital Youth Work courses could be activities that young people go away and work on, and if so is this similar to sending young people off to physical spaces for youth related projects? ie. if you were to ask young people to conduct a questionnaire in their spare time presumably you would seek parental consent for that and would take measures to ensure parents knew of what the activity involved.

If that line of thinking is correct should it be that guidance is provided for parents as to how to best support young people in using the internet?

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Digital Youth Work - Appreciating the Environment

November 8th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

I’ve had a go at designing the framework for the first of the Open Source Youth Programme courses - titled ‘Appreciating the Environment’.

In the film I’ve gone over how the course would actually work. What its lacking at the moment is the meaty bit in the middle - the practical activities that use digital technology & online resources to help young people appreciate their local environment. Take a look at the film and the rest will make sense….
(Note that if you can’t view the text on the slides too well you can download them in pdf format from slideshare here)

So now is an open appeal for suggestions of practical activities that could be used to help young people ‘Explore’, ‘Enjoy’ and ‘Experiment’ with their local environment.

In the film I’ve already suggested using digital photography to take photos of local points of interest and uploading these to Flickr.

Enjoy Explore Experiment
Flickr activity: Use digital cameras/mobile phones to take photos of points of interest in the local area, upload to Flickr, add relevant tags and comment on others photos

The next steps for me are to explore how to set up a site that allows everyone to properly collaborate & contribute to further ideas for the programme and getting this done has actually been very helpful for me to think about what kind of functionality will be needed (it will take a bit longer to actually get something up & running though!).

In the meantime it would be brilliant to get some ideas in from people for activities to fit in the boxes above and then when the time comes I’ll move these over to the new space and then move on to developing the rest of the programme.

If you want to view/use the slides without having to watch the film all over again you can get them via slideshare here

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What Youth Work on the Web will look like in 2009

October 29th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

If you’re reading this what I’d really like you to do is to think of 3 - 5 things that are your predictions for how Youth Work will use the web in 2009.

Maybe you think more youth orgs will use particular social networks. Maybe more practitioners will blog or maybe blogging will die a youth work death? Maybe there will be more events like the UKYouthOnline gathering in September - maybe these events will replace mainstream conferences?

Perhaps we’ll see our first online ‘virtual youth work conference’? Maybe young people will campaign against youth services and educationalists using SNS to impose on their personal web space?

You get the idea!

What I’m hoping to do is put together various peoples thoughts into a nice fancy slideshow which I’ll then stick up on slideshare and you can share and embed it as you see fit and we can all look back in a years time and see what progress is being made along the youth work online journey!


Please DON’T write your predictions in the comments (and spoil the surprise!) - instead please email them to me at info@yomo.co.uk

in the subject write ‘PREDICTIONS”

list your 3 - 5 predictions

please also send over a photo (either of you or your logo etc.) and your name/job/organisation and also if you want a link back to your own site or blog.


As soon as I have enough predictions in I’ll draw something up - so no closing date but the sooner you send in your ideas the more likely they’ll be included in the main slides.

Finally a reminder……

what are your 3 - 5 predictions for how youth work will use the web in 2009?

(& feel free to use a bit of license as to what you think youth work is)

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What is Open Source Youth Work?

October 10th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Education & Skills, Innovation & Technology

In the last post on the digital youth work programme I mentioned that I’d be looking to develop it along the lines of an ‘open source youth work’ approach. I’ve talked about this before but I don’t think I’ve specifically described what I actually mean. So in an attempt to do this I’ve created a ’slidecast’ to explain how I think an open source approach to developing a youth programme could work, and also to look at the overall aims for creating this initial ‘digital youth work programme’.

As I was working through those slides I did realise theres considerable potential to fail, mostly because for open source to work it needs a strong community, and really the youth work online community is still pretty weak and also somewhat guarded I think. Still, everything has to start somewhere so hopefully we can build on the few people who’ve already shown interest and in time we may get to the point where theres a strong enough online community to use the open source approach seriously in developing future programmes & projects with young people.

I’m not sure that I actually did explain the concept that well so if you’re still confused please say so!

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Digital Youth Work - Rationale

September 29th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Education & Skills, Innovation & Technology, Participation & Citizenship, Resources

Apologies for the crap title but hopefully a better name will emerge as this develops. Thanks for the comments in the previous posts following the weekends UKYouthOnline event. The summary of my learning from the event is that I think there needs to be more debate/consideration about using the web as a practical tool for supporting young peoples development (and also for youth practitioners to work more effectively and efficiently).

With that in mind I said that I would start getting some ideas up for planning a ‘digital youth work strategy’. I’ve already thought about how to approach this and wanted to get early thoughts up, so here goes……

The ’strategy’ itself is going to involve developing an online programme using a ‘positive development’ approach. Once I’ve laid out my own ideas I’m going to explore methods for inviting people to contribute and collaborate into the programme along the idea of creating an ‘open source digital youth service‘.
So here’s the early thinking for the strategy:

  • Develop a rationale for the programme
  • Develop the practical programme
  • Identify relevant online tools & resources
  • Develop delivery methods including consideration for supporting practitioners to use the tools
  • Invite collaboration to refine the programme
  • Consider evaluation methods & methods for user involvement
  • Promote and publicise the programme
  • Ongoing evaluation and refinement

Now some things to keep in mind:

  1. The programme itself will be (more…)

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