Posts Tagged ‘Computers for Pupils’

Are all our children connected now? 21/07/2011

Over the past decade, and especially in the past five years, there have been a number of national schemes to help low income families with children to get online. The Computers for Pupils scheme started in 2006 and provided grants through local authorities. In Birmingham that money was increased by the voluntary donations to the Birmingham e-Learning Foundation made by recipients.

Over 20,000 families in Birmingham have received devices under the scheme.

Children with PDAs

Children with PDAs

More – Are all our children connected now?

Go Digital: One Year On 26/02/2010

Some of you may already subscribe to our e-newsletter, Go Digital.  If you don’t, please do!

More – Go Digital: One Year On

Heads Up 15/12/2009

Thought it would be good to share with you our December headline report that we circulate to stakeholders and interested parties. It provides an update on Computers for Pupis (CfP) initiative which has seen over 18,500 computing devices rolled out to secondary schools across Birmingham; Work with Will Perrin on a Talk About Local bespoke programme to target key communities, Online school admissions idTV development; the digital business campaign – Cafelicious and the Healthy Way to Learn IT project that has demonstrated some significant outcomes in terms of developing language skills and diabetes awareness in the Aston pride community. If you would like any further information on any of these initiatives then please get in touch.

e-Safety Strategy Launch event 15/11/2009

Last Tuesday I helped to launch Birmingham’s e-Safety Strategy on behalf of Birmingham Safeguarding Children Board.  My presentation, which is below, talked about the different work that Digital Birmingham has done around the Home Access agenda and then covered Social Networking Sites as a new technology being used by young people that professionals don’t always have a full understanding of.

So I spoke about the Aston Pride project to provide computers in the homes of primary and secondary school children and also the Computers for Pupils grant which has been used by the city to launch 40-50 Birmingham e-Learning Foundation schemes in Secondary Schools across the city. The latter means that more money is coming back in to the system to help provide kit to more kids. More – e-Safety Strategy Launch event

Digital Birmingham is a Birmingham City Council initiative and part of a city wide strategic partnership of more than 40 public, private and voluntary organisations

eGovernment National Awards - Winner 2008