2. Today’s event
Part I: Catalyst Relay – Eric Gill
10.00 Lessons Learned & next steps
12.30 Close (set up show & tell)
Part II: Catalyst Connects – Eric Gill
13.00 Lunch – Oliver Hill
13.45 Catalyst Overview
14.00 Catalyst Serendipity Café: Grand Challenges
15.30 Tea Break
16.00 Future Opportunities
17.15 Show & Tell – Sun Terrace
Part III: Prototype Launch
18.30 – 20.00 Patchworks
3. About Catalyst
• Citizen-led agenda
• Understanding behaviour
– Why do people participate (or not) in
society/civic actions?
• Tools for change
– Next generation {digital} technologies for
social change
• Reflecting on Interdisciplinarity
6. AM Schedule
10.00 Patchworks
10.15 Access ASD
10.30 Group Discussion
11.00 Protee
11.35 Success in Activist Tweets
11.45 Local Trade
12.00 Questions, Next Steps
12.30 Close
8. Today’s event
Catalyst Connects
13.00 Lunch – Oliver Hill
13.45 Catalyst Overview
14.00 Catalyst Serendipity Café: Grand Challenges – Eric Gill
15.30 Tea Break
16.00 Future Opportunities
17.15 Show & Tell – Sun Terrace
Prototype Launch
18.30 – 20.00 Patchworks
9. About Catalyst
• Understanding behaviour
– Why do people participate (or not) in
society/civic actions?
• Tools for change
– Next generation social tools for social change
• Citizen-led
• Reflect on inter-disciplinarity
22. Get Involved
• Expressions of Interest to Launchpads –
rolling deadline – 14th December 2012
• Expressions of interest for serendipity
cafes
• Round 3 Sprints info from early 2013
23. Team & Networking
• @catalystproj
– #catalystas
• Catalyst Project
• www.catalystproject.org.uk
Jon Will Maria Angela Jen Erinma
25. Grand Challenges
• 3 minute provocations
• Listen for ‘Grand’ themes
• Choose a theme that resonates
26. Questions
• Choose a theme that resonates
• Answer 3 questions (10 min per question)
1. How does the theme relate to our region?
2. What’s the research interest?
3. What are the opportunities to bring these
two together?
– Summarise & Feedback
Today’s event in three parts – AM and PM and eveningmorning passing on lessons learned from past to future projectsAfternoon connecting with new potential partnersEvening launching latest prototype from Patchworks project
We’re going to hear from all the current project to pass lessons learned onto future project, Access ASD
Notes:To reflect upon the ways of working, we apply PROTEE , a management process designed to ensure that projects learn from failure as well as success. PROTEE involves a series of dialogues with Sprint and Launchpad project teams to articulate insights to support innovation, project management and interdisciplinarity.Duret, M., Latour, B. Martin, S. Bischof, H., Sondermann, K., Orobengoa, Ai., Bijker, W., Hommels, A., Peters, P., Laredo, P., Woolgar, S., McNally, R. PROTEE: Procedures dans les transportes d’évaluation et de suivi des innovations considerées comme des experimentations collectives. Final Report EC Transport RTD. 4th F’work Programme. Contract No ST-97-SC.2093.
Today’s event in three parts – AM and PM and eveningmorning passing on lessons learned from past to future projectsAfternoon connecting with new potential partners
Welcome and schedule -
Patchworks as an example: Research Sprint – 8 MonthsIs it possible to co-design, with homeless communities, a simple and cheap health monitoring and communication tool using the methods and materials of ‘personal manufacturing’ (DIY-Bio/garage science)? Working with Madlab & SignpostsWe briefly describe current Catalyst projects, to give a flavour of the research. #patchworks involves Lancaster’s School of Healthand Medicine, Lancaster Environment Centre, Signposts (a community resource centre in Morecambe), and MadLab, a Manchester-based not-for-profit community of hackers and innovators. In the project, Signposts volunteers are co-designing a prototype tool using cheap, open source technology that can help to improve support services for the homelessIntro to Patchworks and Ref to the SRA abstract ‘routine chaos’http://vimeo.com/43110132Good refs to Chaotic LivesCornes, M., Joly, L., Manthorpe, J., O'Halloran, S. and Smyth, R. (2011). Working Together to Address Multiple Exclusion Homelessness. Social Policy and Society, 10, pp 513-522 doi:10.1017/S1474746411000261Brown, P., Morris, G., Scullion, L. and Somerville, P. (2012) Losing and Finding a Home: Homelessness, Multiple Exclusion and Everyday Lives. University of Salford. Accessed via http://www.homelesspages.org.uk/node/24491Fitzpatrick, S., Johnsen, S. and White, M. (2011). Multiple Exclusion Homelessness in the UK: Key Patterns and Intersections. Social Policy and Society, 10, pp 501-512 doi:10.1017/S147474641100025X Rogers, R., (2009). The End of the Virtual: Digital Methods, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009. Young, S. D. and Rice, E. (2011). Online Social Networking Technologies, HIV Knowledge, and Sexual Risk and Testing Behaviors Among Homeless Youth. AIDS and Behavior, 2011, Volume 15, Number 2, Pages 253-260