[CALIBK12] anyone going?
Peter Doering
Peter_Doering at sccoe.org
Fri Jun 19 10:52:48 PDT 2009
Hello Richard and Everyone,
I am so glad that we have Jackie Siminitus, CSLA PR Committee member and Barbara Jeffus attending the Statewide Survey: Californians and Information Technology in Sacramento. They are perfect representatives for CSLA.
Thank you
Peter
Peter Doering
Coordinator, Learning Multimedia Center
Santa Clara County Office of Education
1290 Ridder Park Drive
San Jose, CA 95131-2304
(408) 453-6670
(408) 453-6815 Fax
peter_doering at sccoe.org
www.sccoe.org/depts/library
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From: calibk12-bounces at lists.sjsu.edu [mailto:calibk12-bounces at lists.sjsu.edu] On Behalf Of richardguy at aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 12:00 PM
To: calibk12 at listproc.sjsu.edu; calix at listproc.sjsu.edu
Subject: [CALIBK12] anyone going?
This event in Sacramento gives librarians a prime opportunity to ask how a state with the lowest level of school and public library service in the nation can possibly deal with information technology (and there's a free lunch):
Statewide Survey: Californians and Information Technology
Sacramento, CA
Date: June 25, 2009
Time: 12:00 p.m.-1:30 p.m.
Location: California State Association of Counties Conference Center, 1020 11th Street, 2nd Floor, Sacramento, CA
ABOUT THE PROGRAM
While internet use and information technology is expanding, the digital divide is widening for some groups in California. This survey, the second in a five-year annual series of California residents focusing on information technology issues, examines their access to information technology, including computer ownership, access to the Internet, the use of mobile devices, and parents' use of the Internet to connect to their children's schools. The survey also looks at perceptions of the role of government and federal funding to improve access and availability of broadband internet technology. This survey details results in the five major regions in California, by race and ethnicity, between urban and rural communities, and among socioeconomic and political groups.
This study was conducted with funding from the California Emerging Technology Fund and ZeroDivide. This event is co-sponsored with the California Research Bureau.
Lunch will be provided and there is no charge to attend. Pre-registration is requested.
SPEAKER: Dean Bonner is a research associate at PPIC whose expertise includes public opinion and survey research; Latino and African American political attitudes; political trust; and political participation and voting behavior.
http://www.ppic.org/main/event.asp?i=957
Richard K. Moore, InfoSherpa
Huntington Beach, CA
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A poem represents the mastering, even if just for a moment, of the pessimism and the melancholy, and enables you - you the poet, and you, the reader - to go on. -- Philip Larkin
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