The value of digital trustees
It’s Trustees Week so I thought I tell you about my own experience as a Trustee over the last three years.
I have been a trustee for Seescape, a Fife-based charity that supports people with visual impairment, for nearly 3 years. It provides a range of services from that include home assessments, sight support services, equipment support and provision and befriending.
CAKE - A recipe for Success
With significant experience of the stress faced by nurses during the COVID crisis it is great to see supportive tools and techniques emerging. Dr Kath MacDonald and Dr Caroline Dickson from Queen Margaret University (QMU) working with groups of community nurses have developed an interactive toolkit called CAKE, which makes use of creative storytelling to promote self-care and team wellbeing.
The COVID dashboard for Scotland
As the criticality of the coronavirus pandemic has receded, we took the decision recently to retire the COVID dashboard that was created early in the pandemic by a very committed group of volunteers in the Scottish Tech Army. The project that created the dashboard was interesting for a number of reasons and we wanted to reflect on the project, what it delivered and what we learned from it.
SOLE on the march in East Lothian
Over the last 18 months, one of the major projects that the Scottish Tech Army has been working on is SOLE Scotland, the online community platform designed to support the wide range of civic, business, and organisational activities in Scotland’s towns and cities. Having run a pilot in Dunbar in 2021, funding was secured from the UK Community Renewal Fund, alongside continued support from East Lothian Council, to roll the platform out across the whole of East Lothian.
Getting Community Councils online
The COVID pandemic forced a wholesale shift in how community level services are delivered. We saw a fundamental shift in how community level engagement could be delivered and the need for new ways of working accelerated. One example of this is the development of an easily-adopted and scalable platform to allow Community Councils to communicate with and consult the people living in their areas.
We make green tech
Working in collaboration, the Scottish Tech Army (STA), NatWest and GoCodeGreen have built a low carbon impact charity donation platform in support of the humanitarian crisis created by the war in Ukraine. Together we are showing how a common purpose, doing good and having sustainability at the heart of delivery is possible.
Spotlight on.... Behind the scenes team
28th of April 2022 …
The Scottish Tech Army’s second Tech for Good Summit - our flagship event of the year … and Michael von Euw, Charlotte Canham, and Joe Cross were the team that was going to deliver it …
Tech for Good Summit 2022 - a review
The second Tech for Good Summit organised by the Scottish Tech Army took place on the 28th April 2022, the second anniversary of the launch of the Scottish Tech Army itself.
This year’s Summit again gave us an opportunity to explore several areas of the developing tech for good ecosystem and provided the platform for the launch of the Tech for Good Alliance.
Collaboration in the Tech for Good ecosystem
Collaboration and the development and promotion of the tech for good ecosystem are key themes for us in the Scottish Tech Army. We believe that, while there are many great programmes and projects being carried out under the banner of tech for good, the landscape remains fragmented and that as a result, the impact is less than it could be.
Ongoing efforts to support Ukraine
In the face of the ongoing humanitarian disaster in Ukraine, local communities continue to mobilise to great effect. Despite the daily horror stories, there are many examples of personal efforts to help support the war efforts, groups of friends driving across Europe to deliver much needed goods and food, van owners relocating from Edinburgh to Poland to feed the queues of refugees at the Polish borders and countless other inspiring stories of people rallying to support the people of Ukraine.
Digital Skills project gets underway
We announced recently that the Scottish Tech Army is part of a consortium that will be developing a digital skills for life and work programme for care-experienced young people, supported by to funding from The Life Changes Trust Legacy Fund. Having disbursed all its funds, the Trust itself has now wound up and we tuned in to some emotional webinars reviewing the impact of the Trust over the last seven years. It’s clear that it is held in very high regard by those organisations that have worked with and benefitted from the Trust and its funds, and that the team there, led by Carole Patrick, will be sorely missed.
Tech for Good for Ukraine
The invasion of Ukraine on the 24th of February has sent shock waves around the world and as the effects have become apparent, we have seen a huge willingness and determination on the part of many people and organisations to do something to help in some way, especially in supporting the Ukrainians in the conflict zones and those that have left the country and are now refugees in neighbouring countries. In many ways, the reaction has been similar to what was seen in the early days of the COVID pandemic – massive impacts on large numbers of people and a similar desire to find a way to help.
Roll-out of SOLE in East Lothian
Preparations are well underway to begin the next phase of our SOLE project (Supporting Our Local Economy) by engaging directly with communities across East Lothian. At the end of 2021 we secured UK Community Renewal Funding and since then we’ve been working quietly in the background getting ready with new branding, a full marketing plan and an active recruitment campaign to help build out the project team we need to make this project happen.
With OpenUK for International Women’s Day
The day before International Women’s Day this month I the Scottish Tech Army at a lunch at the House of Lords, courtesy of OpenUK, (the organisation that promotes UK leadership and global collaboration in open technology). I was there to hear Baroness Helena Kennedy of the Shaws QC talk about her social justice work and specifically about how she brought female Afghan judges out of the country as the Taliban moved back in.
Digital Skills Programme for Care-experienced Young People
We’re delighted that we are finally able to share some good news we’ve been sitting on for a while. The Scottish Tech Army will be joining a consortium of partners led by YMCA Scotland and including Barnardo’s Scotland, YouthLink Scotland, Renfrewshire Council and Mhor Collective to deliver a Digital Skills programme for care experienced young people.
Our Tech for Good partners - Microsoft
There are so many different ways the tech for good ecosystem works. This month we’ve some good news to share with you on the work we’re doing with one of our partners, Microsoft.
The Digital Poverty Alliance
Scottish Tech Army Co-Founder and CEO Alistair Forbes and Head of Partnerships Kirsty McIntosh were delighted to be confirmed recently as Ambassadors to the Digital Poverty Alliance, a UK wide initiative that, like the Scottish Tech Army, started during the pandemic. Its mission is clear and ambitious - to end digital poverty by 2030.
Scottish Tech Army - Year in review 2021
2021 was a transformational year for the Scottish Tech Army, one in which we completed the transition from our roots as a COVID response initiative to an organisation focussed for the long term on an expanded tech for good mission. Our core objective now is to mobilise Scotland’s tech talent for good, bringing to bear the talents, enthusiasm and commitment of those in the tech and tech-related sectors on the biggest challenges facing us as a nation.
The DigiInventors Challenge 2021
The DigiInventors Challenge is an annual competition, organised by the Digital Health and Care Innovation Centre, for teams of school-age students to develop ideas to encourage young people to keep active, staying healthy and happy now and in the future. 2021 saw the fifth competition run, with significantly expanded scope, taking in teams from the United Arab Emirates as well as teams from Scotland, supported by Heriot-Watt University through its Dubai campus.
Open Source and Sustainability
Scottish Tech Army management team members Joanna Allen and Kirsty McIntosh attended OpenUK’s fascinating Sustainability Day at the Federated Hermes COP26 fringe venue last month. Co-sponsored by ever-collaborative Red Hat, it was a terrific way to get back into networking mode again.