My Native Digital Divide

My 'Native Digital Divide'

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My work in "Bridging the Native Digital Divide":

I have been working for over 15 years to help get Native American Nations on the Internet High School students from BIA schools surround the CRAY Supercomputer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in 1994. I designed and implemented the "first" National Supercomputing Program aimed at Native American high school students for Sandia National Laboratory (SNL) and  the Department of Energy (DOE), called "Countdown To Supercomputing®" to teach Native American High School students from Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) schools to use ‘the Internet, Fractals, Virtual Reality, and Environmental Supercomputing,’ from 1990-95. I was part of the original Navajo Nation’s Technology Committee in 1991-95. I helped get Southwest Indian Polytechnic Institute (SIPI) "first" Internet connection in 1993. I designed, implemented, and maintained the "first" International Native American Network called the "AISES Information System" in 1993-95. I helped get the Crow Nation’s five Tribal Colleges "first" Internet connection with Sandia National Laboratories’ Montana Consortium in 1994. I worked with Dine’ College (formerly Navajo Community College) to get their "first" Internet connection in 1994-95. As an entrepreneur/co-founder/Vice President, I helped start one of the "first" Native American Internet companies called "Advanced Tribal Integrated Information Networks, Inc. " (ATIIN) in 1995-96.Native CyberTrade - a 1995 Native American e-commerce mall
"Internet Indian Wars" in Wired magazineWith my 1995 Internet Company, ATIIN, I designed ‘Community / Tribal Networks’ for the Isleta Pueblo, Tesuque Pueblo, and Rough Rock Community Schools. I designed Websites for over 25 Native American businesses in the Nations "first" Native American E-Commerce Mall, called Native CyberTrade. (Written up in Wired Magazine, Dec 1999: See Native Nets in WIRED Magazine and Internet Indian Wars) I designed a National Network to connect up 49 Tribal Nations for the Council of Energy Resource Tribes (CERT) in 1996.

As a Technology Consultant, via this website as an online "Virtual Office" , I utilized 'web project management techniques' to conduct Statewide Technology Assessments for Hawaii (Polynesians - 7 Community Colleges), North Dakota (5 Tribal Colleges), Alaska (College of Rural Alaska – 7 Tribes) & the Navajo Nation (Four states - AZ, NM, CO, & UT). I have also worked with Technology Teams on Internet Infrastructure Development for Dine’ College (formerly Navajo Community College) in Shiprock, NM, Southwest Indian Polytechnic Institute (SIPI) in Albuquerque, NM, and the Montana Consortium (5 Tribal Colleges) in Montana. I have conducted Technology Assessments for Schools & Tribes, such as Rough Rock Community Schools, Rock Point Community School, Turtle Mountain Chippewa Tribe, Tesuque Pueblo, Navajo Nation, Isleta Gaming Palace & Leech Lake Tribal College. I have also designed Virtual Online Schools, such as the Western Governors University where I design a virtual campus-wide information system behind the web pages that connects higher education institutions from 19 States and 3 countries, and am currently working to create a Virtual Pueblo University, and am working with the National Computational Science Alliance to create High Performance Computing (HPC) Online, to distribute and conduct HPC classes over the Internet from over 164 universities while utilizing high-speed Internet2 type technologies.Internet Technology Service, LLC

Now with my online "Virtual Company", Internet Technology Services at www.InternetTechnologyService.net , I am using my extensive Internet Expertise to provide Internet Solutions to Tribes, Native organizations, and Native businesses, as well as online marketing and online business solutions to help sustainability and promote Tribal Sovereignty.

Some of the Highlights of Internet Technology Service, LLC over the past 3 years:

  • First Nations Cafe' opened in Imperial Beach, CA, USA to house an accumulation of Internet Technologies and create a business model for Tribes to sustain their own Tribal Economic Development.
  • IndianTraining.org was designed & implemented in 45 days, from concept to reality,  to create an American Indian Workforce in Web Development and Film & Video Production.
  • "First" Sovereign Tribal Network Design: submitted to Dep't of Commerce - Economic Development Administration
  • Statewide Inter-Tribal Network Design for 19 Pueblo Nations in New Mexico, USA
  • Kumeyaay Community College: Online designed and implemented to help facilitate the Kumeyaay Nations' Education: 12 Kumeyaay Tribes in Southern California and 5 Kumeyaay Tribes in Baja California, Mexico
  • Became a Collaborative Internet Technology Advisor to the Tribal Digital Village project to work with 18 Mission Band Indian Tribes in Southern California, USA.
  • Have put 23 American Indian owned businesses and organizations  on the Internet by providing a Web Presence in WebWorks.

The BRIDGE: Indian Training Trust Fund, Pinnacle Endeavors,  and Internet Technology Service, LLC have formed a partnership which has led to opening
an Internet Cafe'
: serving a smorgasbord of Internet Technology, with a wireless Internet access 'hot spot'  in Imperial Beach, CA at 206 Palm Ave.

We opened our NEW Internet Cafe' on March 20th, 2003
in Imperial Beach, California, USA

just 2 blocks from the beach!

 

Turquoise_and_Gray2020.gif (1558 bytes)

Below are links to Newspaper articles and Magazine publications about my work, just over a single year, 2000:

American Indians try to bridge 'digital divide'

Indian Country Today (Nov 1, 2000) SACRAMENTO, Calif. - These days at small community gatherings and large-scale pow wows someone brings it up. In American Indian conferences it usually becomes a topic of conversation. Tribal councils and politicians keep warning Indian country about it
http://indiancountry.com/articles/commerce-2000-11-01-03.shtml

 

Indians seek on-ramp to information highway

The Denver Post (Oct. 16, 2000) The American Indian Higher Education Consortium, Whitehouse' Tribal College Initiative, and American Indian College Fund, joined private companies and federal officials, educators, American Indian leaders and other stakeholders in finding ways to help tribal colleges acquire state-of the-art information technology.
http://www.denverpost.com/news/news1016a.htm

 

Caught in the Digital Divide

As record numbers of Americans go online, the gap between those who have access to technology and those who don't may be widening. Education World looks at the digital divide and what it means to educators. Included: Links to information and resources on the digital divide. (An article in Education World - Technology in the Classroom)
http://www.education-world.com/a_tech/tech041.shtml

Pictures from the Havasupai site getting their "first" Internet connection at the bottom of the Grand Canyon.

NAU, Navajo Nation, and Starband have connected over 70 of the 110 chapter houses on the Navajo Nation and will complete connecting the rest this week. Last week the Hopi Police Dept. also received a system that will connect them with the FBI data center and other public safety agencies across the country. This system also allows individuals who buy the system starting October to take courses on the NAU university-house network from home. (see also: Mule trains and satellites bridge the "digital divide" at Starband )
http://www.evanscraig.com/NativeDigitalDivide/Havasupai.htm

ClintonGesturing.jpg (15468 bytes)Dine' College becomes the "first" Tribal College to setup and utilize the Access Grid

President Clinton returned to New Mexico and became the first presiding President to visit the Navajo Nation. During his address to the Navajo Nation, President Clinton pledged to bring attention and corporate funding to the digital divide.
http://www.evanscraig.com/NativeDigitalDivide/clinton.htm

 

A Strong but Sensitive Computing Initiative for Native American Communities

Envision - a quarterly Science Magazine for National Partnership for Advanced Computing Infrastructure & the San Diego Supercomputing Center (NPACI & SDSC):   As Internet technology has permeated nearly every aspect of everyday life, the "Digital Divide" separating citizens into "haves" and "have-nots" has become a hot topic of discussion and policymaking. Statistically, Native Americans are technological have-nots, as Internet access is uncommon—if not impossible—on reservation lands where telephones are sometimes rare, and few Native Americans pursue careers as computer scientists or technologists. An impulse, then, is to "fix" this situation by bringing universal access to all Native Americans. However, cultural issues affect the number of tribal people who wish to pursue education and careers in the field. Other factors, including the rural nature of reservation lands and the structure of the Tribal Colleges system, limit the opportunities available to Native Americans. Increasing the inclusion of Native Americans in computer science, then, requires a program that addresses both cultural and technological issues.
http://www.npaci.edu/enVision/v16.2/native-americans.html

 

Research Foundations on Successful Participation of Underrepresented Minorities in Information Technology: A Cyberconference

National Science Foundation (NSF) publication: U.S. demographics predictions indicate that African Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and Asian/Pacific Islanders together will constitute the majority of the population in both schools and the work environment by the year 2030; the State of California is experiencing this shift in 2000. To address this change in society, a recent Coalition to Diversify Computing (CDC) workshop report, "Recruitment and Retention of Underrepresented Minority Graduate Students in Computer Science," offers 25 practical suggestions for university computer science departments to attract and retain minority students.
http://www.cise.nsf.gov/itminorities.html

 

My 1999 Research: Native Digital Divide

This research paper answers the question; "What are the obstacles to integrating technology for improving education into Native cultures?" by identifying the barriers, reporting possible solutions and summarizing the various online reports in the "Native American Distance Education Community’ website. According to reports over the last decade, the lack of Native American infrastructure development and accompanying skills needed to maintain it, cooperative Tribal commitments, and collaborative government policies are the most common barriers affecting Native communities. Other questions about Native American telecommunication infrastructure are also examined, as well as reporting suggested possible solutions that Native communities can utilize to overcome these obstacles.

The full online report and the accompanying Appendix A is at http://www.eot.ahpcc.unm.edu/Community/Reports/NativeDigitalDivide.html contains a listing of the online reports, papers, and groups are identified by date of issue, then summarized, the identified obstacles are listed, and their conclusions are stated.

 

See also my Native American Websites: The Native American Distance Education Community where we are "On the Road to Forming an Indigenous Distance Education Institute." My Vision: to form an Indigenous Distance Education Institute that provides the necessary integration, connectivity and dissemination of widely separated resources and programs among the Native American distance education community. Now each region, school, tribe, consortium acts on their own, and each has unique programs and resources that could be shared by others. I envision a common place or means by which all could share their unique resources" & the Tribal Computational Science Program where I house the Tribal College Internet Status: A summary of the Tribal Colleges capable of utilizing some sort of Distance Education technologies, as well as an updated Tribal College President's contact list. And lastly, Countdown to Supercomputing® - Online, the "first" National Supercomputing Program aimed at Native American high school students in collaboration with the National Computational Science Alliance, the Albuquerque High Performance Computing Center (AHPCC), the National Partnership for Computational Infrastructure (NPACI), the San Diego Supercomputing Center (SDSC), the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Sandia National Laboratory (SNL) and the Department of Energy (DOE), called "Countdown To Supercomputing®" to teach Native American High School students from Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) schools to use ‘the Internet, Fractals, Virtual Reality, and Environmental Supercomputing,’

Other Digital Divide Resources

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Evans Craig, 1999Evans Craig - Internet Strategy Consultant
Copyright © 1997-2004  by Evans Craig
All rights reserved.
Revised: January 06, 2004.
Shiprock, NM on the Navajo Nation

 

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