I’m Elenor, I study at changecourse.se, exploring social entrepreneurship and leadership.
I also run the platform https://handlingar.se/ where you can request public documents and use freedom of information law digital. And in a few weeks you will hear me in Civic Tech Sweden’s new podcast about civic tech. https://civictech.se .
During this year I have been exploring and researching what tech initiatives there are in Stockholm for children and youth to learn tech outside of regular school as a leisure activity.
With the emerging shortage of 70 000 IT-workers per year in Sweden (such as programmers, developers, technicians), Sweden is in danger of falling behind when it comes to digitalisation and internet development. I believe that if we introduce and teach tech to youth early, there is a bigger chance they would have an interest in the topic later in life, and even when “choosing” a career.
I want to start a tech-school that compliments the other tech-initiatives in Stockholm.
Ideally this tech school would:
Teach and use FOSS
Not be on a volunteering basis
Be outside of Stockholm, where the other initiatives do not reach. (And in the future, the whole of Sweden)
Also focus on schools and teachers, change school curriculums to focus more on tech and educate about opportunities of programs for learning.
Some of the question I still have to think more about:
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How this school would survive economical
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How to teach and use FOSS (and how you only do that?)
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The basic layout of the school.
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Who to collaborate with.
Join the conversation
You will get
A copy of this months’ digest (magazine) and opportunities to make meaningful new connections across shared interests:
- Access to other contributors via the community forum
- Ticket to an invitation-only session at our 2021 international conference
- First access to future community digests and event invitations
How is this financed?
This Community Journalism project and publication is part of the NGI Forward initiative. Launched by the European Commission in the autumn of 2016, NGI stands for Next Generation Internet. It has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 825652 from 2019-2021. You can learn more about the initiative and our involvement in it at https://ngi.edgeryders.eu
Where does this lead?
The contents of Edgeryders “Internet of Humans” NGI Forum and the Community Journalism project are analysed using the SSNA method. The results are then sent to EU lawmakers to be incorporated into policy recommendations. It will also inform a conference at the end of the project and selected articles and contributions will be published in book form as the “Next Generation Internet - Edgeryders Digest”. The authors of the selected articles who agree to them being published in that book will also be invited personally to the final conference.