Thursday 20 January 2022

Big Conversation (CILIP North East)

 


The Big Conversation roadshow comes to CILIP North East.


CILIP North East Member Network have teamed up with CILIP to organise a one-off event to bring people back together, share an update on new developments from CILIP and celebrate the many ways in which our community is supporting the process of recovery from the pandemic.

CEO Nick Poole will be joining us on Thursday 17 November at 16:00 to celebrate the many ways in which our community is supporting the process of recovery from the pandemic and to give you a much-needed opportunity to network and catch up with colleagues. You will discover more about the comprehensively revised and update Professional Knowledge and Skills Base online tool, benefits for CILIP members and you’ll be able to express your views about the next 5-year plan for CILIP.

This event will be virtual and will be free to attend. It would be great to see as many of you as possible so please do book. 

Register for this event

Tuesday 18 January 2022

Webinar - social justice – isn’t that political? An introduction to social justice and the work of The Network

graphic of two people chatting into mics

 

Register for this webinar

CILIP North East are delighted that John Vincent will lead our next webinar which will briefly outline the history and development of The Network which started in 1999 and will look at some of its current activities. 

The major part of the session will be a practical look at what part libraries can play in promoting social justice, with plenty of opportunity for discussion! 


  • An introduction to the common terms – social justice, social inclusion, social cohesion
  • Background – where this work has developed from & current position (including tying-in to CILIP’s “Changing Lives” strategy & ethics)
  • What do we know about what works?
  • What can libraries do? Practical examples
  • An outline of some of the current work of The Network

When: Thurs 10th Feb 6pm-7pm
Where: Online - link to join the webinar will be sent in your registration confirmation email.
Cost: Free for CILIP members, £25 for non members (exclusive of VAT)

About John Vincent

John Vincent has worked in the public sector since the 1960s, primarily for Hertfordshire, Lambeth and Enfield public library services. In 1997, he was invited to become part of the team that produced the UK’s first review of public libraries and social exclusion (from which The Network, which he now coordinates, originated).
 
John runs courses and lectures, writes, produces regular newsletters and ebulletins, and lobbies for greater awareness of the role that libraries, archives, museums, and the cultural & heritage sector play in contributing to social justice. He is particularly interested in supporting the work that libraries do with young people in care, with LGBTQ+ people, and with people seeking sanctuary and other ‘new arrivals’ to the UK. In 2014, John was given a CILIP CDEG Special Diversity Award, and, in September 2014, he was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of CILIP.
 
In September 2010, the book he co-wrote with John Pateman, Public libraries and social justice, was published by Ashgate (now Routledge); and, in January 2014, he published LGBT people and the UK cultural sector … (also by Ashgate, now Routledge). In 2018, John’s report to Arts Council England was published, Libraries welcome everyone: six stories of diversity and inclusion from libraries in England. In May 2020, City of Sanctuary published his guide, Libraries of Sanctuary resource pack; and, in 2020, he was by Facet Publishing to write the first in a new series looking at libraries and social justice. This first title will be Libraries and Sanctuary: supporting refugees and other new arrivals.

Register for this webinar

Monday 10 January 2022

Housing Plus Project evaluation

This blog post is written by CILIP NE committee member and Library School Representative Biddy Casselden  who is sharing some information about a project she has been involved with throughout this year.

Housing Plus Project evaluation


The project

This term I have been on sabbatical and one of the things I have been working on is evaluating a digital skills project for older people delivered during the Covid-19 pandemic by Your Homes Newcastle in partnership with Newcastle City Libraries.  Digital skills training based in Newcastle City Libraries has run successfully for several years, however the Covid-19 pandemic has challenged how this training can be delivered safely to vulnerable and older people.

This project ran from January to August 2021, and its aim was to help equip older people living in sheltered accommodation with the necessary digital skills to cope with an increasingly digital world, and to provide them with a specially configured tablet.  There were two phases to the pilot which used the online teaching resources, Learn My Way and Online Basics as a foundation for delivery: Phase one utilised 16 hours of telephone training at the height of the lockdown, whereas phase two utilised 12 hours of face-to-face small group sessions in sheltered accommodation as lockdown eased.  Basic tablet use training was embedded into the delivery so that older people were able to identify and navigate, the home screen, Gmail app, file management tools, and Google Chrome. Library accounts were set up for each training participant and they were shown how to access and use online library apps, BorrowBox and Libby to enable them to download free Ebooks, audio books and magazines.

The evaluative research carried out adopted a qualitative approach using telephone interviews to evaluate how older people felt following their training, particularly in terms of their technological confidence and feelings of social inclusion and well-being.  NVIVO software was used to draw out the key themes from the interviews and explore the difference this training made to their lives.

The participants

Participants were all living in sheltered accommodation and aged between 53 and 91 years old, with a third having a disability that affected their ability to fully participate with society, exacerbated further by the pandemic and social distancing.  Being predominantly from the Baby Boomer Generation (1946-1954) with a few from the Silent Generation (born 1928 to 1945) meant that participants had not learnt digital skills as part of their education, and very few had been exposed to digital during their working lives which tended to be linked to manual trades, sales and retail, domestic and caring roles.  They generally did not possess the knowledge and skills required for accessing the internet, and lacked confidence in using technology, worsened by age related barriers linked to cognition, physical, financial and social aspects.

They very much felt as though they were a left-behind generation isolated from wider society, particularly during the pandemic, yet they were keen to learn new skills helping them to adjust to a new way of living.

Motivators for taking part

The older people interviewed identified several motivators for undertaking the digital skills training; partly this was to do with updating themselves so they were better able to cope with a digital world, but also it was about improving their technological confidence as many of them were genuinely frightened of technology, and what would happen if things went wrong, or concerns related to digital safety and security arose. 

They were motivated by the chance to better communicate with the outside world and gain greater independence with many having previously relied on family to help with tasks such as online shopping, and banking.  The way in which the training was delivered was also an important motivator for participants as it was delivered in a safe and accessible manner (by telephone or as a small group in sheltered accommodation communal lounges), utilising a step-by-step approach from supportive and non-judgmental trainers, and resulting in the ownership of a tablet as a condition of the training. 

For many older people digital illiteracy is a source of embarrassment in the same way that illiteracy may have once been perceived, and the social stigma associated with this can result in them not engaging with digital literacy initiatives.

Participant comments to do with motivation included the following:

“I was just scared to be honest with you, to use the computers and that, cos you hear that much about them, don’t you, about people getting your information and stuff like that.”

“I was really nervous to start with because I knew nothing at all about it. But everything went well. I felt comfortable, and all my fears went away after that first lesson. If I went wrong, it was alright.”

“My daughter does everything for me online when I need to pay the bills and things like that.  So, anything I need, she’s always done it for me.  I just think … I need to stop being frightened of it, and try to get in the know, and try to get up to date with things” 

Photograph of project participants

Figure 1: Participants from a mixture of digital literacy schemes across Newcastle gather alongside their instructors to receive their awards for completion of their training.

Benefits of taking part

“It was like learning to drive, and it opened a new world for us, I could just go out.  Learning that, has taught me, that everything I need to know, I can go on there and it’s there ready, marvellous.”

The benefits of receiving the digital literacy training were immense for participants; despite training covering basic knowledge and skills, it helped to boost confidence and sparked a desire for further learning amongst participants.  Email was something that many participants didn’t know how to do, and yet it is an essential communication tool for engaging with business and service providers on a regular basis.  Searching for information and understanding how cookies work was another revelation for many participants, as was using a tablet and downloading apps.

Receiving a tablet as part of the training meant that participants could practice what they had learnt thereby helping to reinforce the training, and also building up confidence to interact with similar devices such as smartphones.  Incidentally many of the participants owned smartphones but didn’t really know how to use them to their full capability using them for limited functions such as making phone calls.

 

There was a strong relationship between knowledge, skills and confidence.  All participants felt more confident using technology following the training, and it was the little bits of knowledge that helped to make big differences in how they felt about technology, and their own ability to engage with a digital world.  This newfound confidence acted as a catalyst with many of the participants expressing a desire to learn more and use their newfound skills to further enhance their everyday lives, by joining their GP surgery online, undertaking family history searching, or zoom calling their overseas relatives.

The training helped to connect older people socially both through the training experience itself, and by enabling them to utilise digital communicative technologies such as email, online shopping and banking, and social media such as Facebook.  The Covid-19 pandemic has resulted in many of the older people interviewed feeling more isolated due to social distancing, with some having to shield because of health issues.  Therefore, by gaining digital skills they were able to become more socially included in society, helping enhance their feelings of connectedness and wellbeing.

Participants really enjoyed the training and benefitted from additional benefits of Newcastle’s online library which they were introduced to during the training sessions.  The online library helped to widen participation to those who had not previously used the physical library, and also encouraged others to return to the physical library as lockdown eased.  

Summary

Such partnerships between social housing providers and public libraries are vital resulting in a symbiotic relationship for both services.  The public library service provides a means of further digital training, together with an Aladdin’s Cave of resources and services accessible to users both digitally and physically.  The involvement of a social housing provider helps to directly target those groups of people that need digital support and provides an environment in which small group and individual training can occur, facilitated by Wi-Fi access enabling social connections.

The Housing Plus Pilot made a real difference to the participants interviewed during this research, even more important when one considers the Covid-19 pandemic and the move towards a more digital world during this period.  Helping to build confidence with the use of simple, step-by-step training with a personalised approach boosted people’s self-confidence.  Skills training alone does not necessarily facilitate digital and social inclusion but helping to instil a confidence in older people’s ability to use digital devices, and encouraging exploration and experimentation helps to build feelings of social inclusion and is an important step in helping people to face the fear and do it anyway.

“I came away really confident.  The amount of things I have learnt about the internet.  I am never going to be a master, but I am a lot more confident.  I know how to do a little bit more….  I am not as scared as I was, I know I am not going to blow the world up; I can cancel or delete.”

“It is just a way of life now, and without the likes of people like **** and **** and everyone involved; helping people who have got no idea about technology, or very little idea.  You are opening up a whole new chapter in people's lives technology wise…. giving people that little bit more knowledge.”

 

Biddy Casselden – Senior Lecturer, i-school, Northumbria University

Lisa Dawson - NCC/YHN Digital Inclusion Programme Coordinator




Friday 7 January 2022

In the library with the Data Protection Act - event review

Suzie Williams (Secretary of CILIP North East committee) attended this webinar led by Aude Charillon and hosted by CILIP North East. It was part two, following on from a very success webinar Aude lead for us last autumn about online privacy skills. The first webinar focused on skills we have (or don’t have!) as individuals – this second webinar widened this out to data protection within our libraries. Aude’s natural enthusiasm and curiosity for this subject made the session very engaging.

As library and information staff, we make a commitment to “uphold, promote and defend: […] the confidentiality of information provided by clients or users and the right of all individuals to privacy” (from: CILIP Ethics). Protecting users’ right to privacy usually translates into matters of data protection, but not solely. Aude covered the following topics and there were plenty of opportunities for participants to get involved and share their experiences:

  • Requirements of UK GDPR
  • Reviewing your library’s data collection and retention practices
  • Informing citizens about what we do with their data
  • Working with library software and resources suppliers
  • Offering privacy literacy classes and privacy-friendly tools.

One participant commented that it is often a case of personal choice in balancing up creepy (ie how much data an organisation has about you) and convenience (do I just click ‘accept’ when asked if I am happy for data to be harvested as I use this site’). Discussion about what is meant by ‘personal data’ highlighted that it isn’t just things like us sharing our names and email addresses, but it is also data collected in the background eg. the physical location of the pc we are using.


(Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/d9ILr-dbEdg)

Key takeaways from this webinar are:

  • Decide what you are happy about sharing of your personal data.
  • Also think about what you are happy with for data you may be collecting from a wider library perspective.
  • Make sure your have mechanisms in place to ensure the data you collect is up to date.
  • You can’t have implicit consent – you have to specifically ask for an individual’s consent.
  • We can feel awkward or shy, but we can ask why an organisation is asking about our info about – ie for what reason, what legitimate reason, what lawful basis.
  • Collecting for ‘legitimate reasons’ is interpreted differently by companies – many did not change their practice when GDPR came into force in 2018 as they said people aren’t bothered and it’s ok to collect their data. It is 3 years since GDPR became law, so now is a good opportunity to review your library’s practices.
  • Sometimes companies hide the settings for where you can choose what privacy settings you are happy with – you may need to hunt for it!
  • Step into shoes of one of our library users – think about how they might feel being asked about being asked for personal information.
  • Think about privacy issues when at the design stage when you are putting in a new service or piece of software.

A good closing comment from a participant was – start with your own personal practice (i.e. get your own house in order), lead by example, and spread out to your library and organisation.

If you are interested in finding out more about this here are some useful resources: