TASCHA Research Seminar, Winter 2010

November 30, 2010

TASCHA’s two Winter 2010 seminars continue to focus on the Global Impact Study of Public Access to Information & Communication Technologies. The Inventory Database course will bring students together to help with the development of an online database of public access venues in Bangladesh, Brazil, Chile, Lithuania, and the Philippines. The Benefit Cost Analysis seminar is designed to parallel the research process for scholars and practitioners interested in benefit cost analysis. Students will participate in three research processes: research design, data analysis, and presentation of policy relevant findings.

Global Impact Study leads research seminars

November 22, 2010

To further engage the University of Washington and Information School communities in mutual sharing of knowledge and learning, the Global Impact Study is leading research seminar sections on a variety of topics. Possible topics include literature reviews, analysis of quantitative and qualitative data, and applying research findings to practice in the library and information sciences field.

Benefit cost analysis of public access ICT

November 12, 2010

As part of the Global Impact Study, we are interested in analyzing the benefits and costs of public access to information and communication technology. The Global Impact Study is developing survey and hedonic pricing methods for describing the benefits and costs of public access to information and communication technology in seven countries.

Benefit Cost Analysis (BCA) by Tyler Davis

November 3, 2010

I’m attending a TASCHA Talk, presented by Tyler Davis, an ESPA PhD student who is doing some BCA as part of the Global Impact Study. Lots of “economist” assumptions here. I must admit that I’m a little biased against BCA for a few reasons (which may be disproven after I know a little more about […]

Social movements, solidarity networks, and the quest for social change in the Latin American context: The case of the Zapatista movement in Chiapas, Mexico

November 2, 2010

TASCHA’s Maria Garrido is presenting her work on Social movements, solidarity networks, and the quest for social change in the Latin American context: The case of the Zapatista movement in Chiapas, Mexico on Friday, November 5, 2010. Join us at 11am in Mary Gates Hall, Room 420.

More on open development

October 18, 2010

I realize from delving more into this that several of us have come to the same conclusion. I’m repeating myself but here goes: It’s not about building a big repository. Stop that. It’s about aggregating, not centralizing. Making it easy to find, aggregate, and mash up.

For telecenter M&E, what should be tracked and measured?

October 14, 2010

There are a series of interesting conversations occurring at the Telecenter Europe Summit (#TES10) around the importance of community technology programs to advance the EU e-inclusion goals. There is also a sense that these centers need to do a better job of tracking and measuring their work, both to make their case to funders and…

Global Impact Study: Montpellier workshop report

October 13, 2010

I’m finally sharing this workshop report. It’s a personal account for those who were not able to attend. I’ve tried to give a sense of the flavor of the meeting and the range of topics and issues that came up. This is a large and complex project, presenting many challenges — from the methodological to the administrative. I did my best not to air dirty laundry, but also not to sanitize what I heard.

Create an open access repository

October 8, 2010

Joe and I are overhauling the Technology & Social Change Group website. I took a step back this week to think about what’s most important for this first version, and how we’re going to transfer over our existing content. I’ve dubbed TASCHA website 1.0 the “does-not-suck version” in order to keep us focused on the basics, pull together all of our content, and push discussions about feature requests to the point in time where we have something up that works and something concrete to react to.

Collaborative Knowledge Sharing study presents at Singapore conference

October 7, 2010

This past summer, Mike Best, the Principal Investigator of the Collaborative Knowledge Sharing in-depth study, presented a paper at the 19th annual Asia Media Information and Communication Centre (AMIC) conference in Singapore. The paper, written on preliminary findings from Mike’s in-depth study, Connecting in Real Space: How People Share Knowledge and Technologies in Cybercafés, was very well-received and prompted vigorous discussion with conference attendees, earning “best paper of the session” accolades.