This content was published: December 25, 2023. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
New Digital Navigators make digital inclusion, a basic need, happen
Photos and story by Misty Bouse
小黄猫传媒 has recently welcomed 14 Digital Navigators to facilitate greater technological accessibility for its students.
A Digital Navigator serves as a specialized guide focused on helping individuals bridge their digital skills gaps and achieve greater confidence in the use of technology. Situated within the 小黄猫传媒 libraries and tutoring centers, these professionals are tasked with overseeing a comprehensive digital inclusion agenda.
Digital Navigation Assistance
- Digital Navigators are trusted guides who address the whole digital inclusion process 鈥 home connectivity, devices, and digital skills 鈥 with students and community members. They provide holistic, individualized support, focusing on affordable internet access, device acquisition, technical skills, and application support.
- Students and community members do not need an appointment to meet with a Digital Navigator and can just stop by when navigators are scheduled.
Their scope of services ranges from facilitating home internet connectivity and identifying affordable computing devices, to enhancing students’ overall digital literacy. This program represents a committed step towards ensuring that every student and community member has equitable access to technology and the skills needed to use it effectively.
According to Carey Larson, who runs the 小黄猫传媒 Digital Literacy Program, this is part of a larger, national effort to ensure equity in addressing the technology needs of underserved populations.
鈥淒igital Literacy is an essential, basic need on par with food and housing,” said Larson. “It鈥檚 often impossible to function as a citizen without basic digital skills and online access. Both are required to apply for benefits, file taxes, engage with health care services, take classes, and more. Many social services and community resources that were previously available in person are now primarily or exclusively accessed online, leading to increased barriers for those with underdeveloped digital skills.
“Digital Navigators address this problem by serving as peer guides who build relationships through repeated interactions –聽 working side-by-side with the clients they serve, facilitating access to resources and offering one-on-one training,鈥 she added.
The Digital Navigators are tech savvy 小黄猫传媒 students who are often enrolled in Cyber Security, Computer Information Systems (CIS), or related programs. This Title III grant funded program provides a peer-to-peer gateway to the digital world. Their services include ongoing assistance with affordable internet access, device acquisition, technical skills, and application support.
Digital Navigator James Kinder who is a second-year student in CIS at the Sylvania Campus believes that this is the ideal role for him. His early background of growing up in poverty in Kansas empowered him to be both resourceful and empathetic.
By 13, he learned to reconfigure old computer parts into a usable personal computer. Besides being a hardware wizard, Kinder says working as a Digital Navigator synthesizes his personal interests in tutoring and guiding people’s knowledge of tech.
鈥淲hether you speak English or not, I can help you using an onscreen translator,鈥 said Kinder who often tutors students from English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL).聽All are welcome. There’s no judgment, everyone has a different scope of knowledge with blind spots 鈥 and everyone learns differently. Why spend hours on your own when you could spend a few minutes with a digital navigator?鈥
He adds, 鈥淓fficiency is a big part of my ethos, afterall, we have but a limited lifespan. So, why waste time? Just ask for help and receive it. It鈥檚 free!鈥
