April 10th, 2012 by Lisa DeCanio 
  Posted in Google Cambridge
  
We've   all had that conversation with our grandparents, in which we   painstakingly try to instruct them – for the eighth time – how to open   the internet browser to send an email. Recognizing this digital divide   in the way seniors access the internet, Amanda Del Balso, Community Affairs Co-Lead and AdWords Account Manager at Google Cambridge, decided to take action.
  
After   spending time in Dublin last year, Del Balso observed the Google team   out there participating in the Age Engage program, which aims to equip   seniors with basic internet skills to improve their quality of life. The   program, she thought, would be well-suited for the Boston-area, and   once returning stateside, Del Balso vetted out a pilot program with the   local team at Google Cambridge.
  In a partnership with Cambridge Community Television (CCTV), Google Cambridge launched the Age Engage pilot program   in December with about 20 seniors attending two, 2-hour class sessions.   The classes are unique in that they level the intense love Googlers   have for the internet and channel that into one-to-one training for   seniors. The curriculum is loose, explains Del Balso, and while the team   aims to establish general search and email skills, each student possess   a different skill level, and the classes are really tailored to their   individual needs.
  "The   levels of people that come in really vary, so that's where the beauty   of one-to-one pairing comes in," says Del Balso. "That student walks   away with four hours of one-to-one, intensive tutoring."
  As   you can imagine, the stories behind Age Engage are pretty inspiring and   demonstrate a true sense of community-building that comes with the   program. Del Balso describes a story of a Googler helping tutor a woman   on Google Maps, and after a few searches, they discovered they live   within blocks of one another. In another example, Del Balso helped teach   a woman how to upload photos into a program that would allow her and   her mother to virtually try on glasses.
  "We   work on the computer all the time," says Del Balso of the Age Engage   staff of Google volunteers. "I think it's a really nice marriage of   Google's values of making the internet accessible to all people in a   really easy way…It's quality of life improvement in such an engaging   way."
  The   program will be ramping up more classes in the coming months, with the   ultimate goal of providing one-on-one tutoring to 250 local seniors   before the end of the year. "Moving forward, we're really going to try   to focus on improving the in-class experience for the students already   coming, and see how we can make it bigger or better," says Del Balso.
  For more on the Age Engage program, check out the video below, and feel free to contact googleinthehub@google.com. Oh, and sign up your grandparents!
  
http://bostinno.com/2012/04/10/google-cambridge-pilots-age-engage-program-to-help-connect-seniors-to-the-internet/
  
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