A short documentary made by students of a one-room schoolhouse in Panoche Valley, San Benito County. Meet the ten students at Panoche Valley Elementary School and learn about the beautiful and remote area they live in. Produced in partnership between CMAP and the San Benito County Library.
Digital Literacy Training-Reaching Rural Youth. Meet the students at Panoche Valley Elementary School, a one-room schoolhouse in Panoche Valley, San Benito County.
ZeroDivide is creating a new generation of technology users within underserved communities in California, Hawaii, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington states. The "Generation ZD Digital Literacy Program" targets low-income, minority, disabled, and underserved youth between the ages of 5-25, who have limited or no access to digital and information technology in the home.
ZeroDivide is training new broadband users, building replicable best practices digital media curricula, and providing technical assistance and capacity-building support.
ZeroDivide is creating a new generation of technology users and training new broadband users, building replicable best practices digital media curricula, and providing technical assistance and capacity-building support.
Students at Spy Hop are empowered to share their voice, to speak up, to speak out. They tell their stories through emerging digital mediums in film, design, radio, and music.
Since you already know that ZeroDivide was awarded Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) funding last week for our Generation ZD Digital Literacy Program, it's time to talk about the seven great organizations we are partnering with in this effort. Let's build in a little western states geography lesson as well and start from Hawaii, cross the ocean to the Pacific Northwest, go southbound, and then move slightly eastward.
Affordability and lack of digital skills are the main reasons why 93 million Americans -- one-third of the country -- are not connected to high-speed Internet at home.