E-INCLUSION POLICY SURVEY RESULTS: EUROPE VS. POLAND

Elżbieta MIŁOSZ

Lublin University of Technology,

Associate Professor, Department of Management

ul. Nadbystrzycka 38D, 20-618 Lublin, Poland

tel. +48 81525 4214

e-mail:

Marta MIŁOSZ

Lublin University of Technology,

Assistant, Department of Management

ul. Nadbystrzycka 38D, 20-618 Lublin, Poland

tel. +48 81525 4214

E-Inclusion is one of main duty of society which aspires to be the Information Society. The essence of e-Inclusion is an adaptation of all participants to new reality where everyone thanks to Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) can take part in wider society.

Introduction

Development of new technologies, especially ICT, changed meaningly a way of functioning of people and gave them new opportunities in many areas of their acting, from job apply to leisure activities. It leads to more effectible and comfortable life and work. It also creates new barriers and there appears the gap between people who have an access to ICT and ones who cannot benefit from it. This situation inevitably leads to dividing and discrimination in society. E-Inclusion is an idea of including every person to the Information Society.

The first task on the roadmap of e-Inclusion is defining groups of people which are particularly threatened with exclusion, determined by age, place of living, gender, literacy, ability (Brochure, 2006). Additionally some of these groups have other difficulties like e.g. problems with getting job or education. An example can be elderly or disable people, who often cannot adapt to new condition and stay on the margin of society (especially that demographic trends show significant rise of percentage elder and disable people in society in next decades).

ECDL Foundation survey on e-Inclusion policy

A realization of e-Inclusion is based on wide, regular surveys, which point main problems, determine proper policy and regulate actions. ECDL Foundation examined twenty five countries to collect opinions about e-Inclusion policy (ECDL Foundation, 2007). Survey results will be submitted to European Commission and help to choose course of action. Survey was based on the questionnaire placed on ECDL Foundation website (www.ecdl.com). It examined most important topics and shown that an idea of e-Inclusion developed mainly in Europe (82% respondents of ECDL Foundation survey).

Questionnaire contained the following questions:

Question 1.  To help us analyse the following survey in most efficient way, would you please indicate where are you based?

Question 2.  Which social group are threatened to be left behind in the development of the Information Society?

Question 3.  The EU has identified the key policy areas of the e-Inclusion initiative in the Riga Declaration 2006. Please order these areas according to priority knowing and understanding the circumstances in your country (1 means least and 6 the most important).

Question 4.  What are the most important barriers to the creation of an e-inclusive society in your country?

Question 5.  The EU and the Member States have expressed their special interest in securing the participation of the elderly people to social and economic life. According to your opinion, what would be the 3 most important steps in a long term strategy this group?

Question 6.  In your opinion what instrument should be mobilized in the implementation of an e-Inclusion strategy? Please select up to 3 opinions.

There was an analogical survey in Poland (realised by authors) in which took part a group of seventy six students of age twenty to twenty four. The purpose of the survey was study of awareness of problems of the Information Society in a group of young, well educated, Polish people in comparison with EU society.

Results of surveys

The questionnaire of Polish survey consisted of five questions because the group of respondents was well-defined so the first question was unnecessary. Answers of respondents

of ECDL Foundation survey (ECDL Foundation, 2006) compared with equivalent ones of Polish students are shown below.

Question 2: Which social group are threatened to be left behind in the development of the Information Society?

ECDL-Foundation survey: Over 71% respondents point older workers and elderly people as a group threatened with being left behind in the development of the Information Society. People with lower level of education come second (almost 68%). It gives weight to role of education and being opened minded. Psychological barriers like: treating one's own education as completed, anxiety, disbelief in one's capabilities or fear of competing make people resign from benefits of ICT and retreat from some areas of social or economic activity (fig.1).

Figure 1. Social group which are threatened to be left behind in the development of the Information Society

Comparison: As in Europe the first place is occupied with older worker and elderly person but the second one bears witness to the fact how important is accessibility to ICT. More then 74% respondents consider that people who have lower accessibility to ICT supported service have a problem with being member of the Information Society. Surprisingly lower level of education is perceived as a significant factor only to 12.82% of Polish respondents (67.9% in Europe) in contrast to the accessibility to ICT supportive services – 74.36% (26.4% in Europe).

Conclusion: Both surveys corroborate that older workers and elderly people can have the biggest problem with adapting to new reality of the Information Society.

Question 3: Please order these areas according to priority knowing and understanding the circumstances in your country.

ECDL-Foundation survey: Improvement of digital literacy and competences is considered as the key area for e-Inclusion (the most important for more than 41% respondents). The second place is occupied with addressing the needs of older workers and elderly people (more than 23% - rate 5, 17% - rate 6). PC computer is still relatively very new invention, but the leap in this field has been enormous. Software has become sophisticated, and using it is often indispensable in everyday life. The youth which is taught of computer science at primary school easily enters into the Information Society. Others, especially elderly have to make an effort to adopt some necessary skills often off their own hand (fig.2).

Figure 2. Key policy areas of the e-Inclusion

Comparison: According to the survey better e-Accessibily and usability (22.83%) as well as a reduction of geographical digital device which comes the second (19.05%) and improvement of digital literacy and competences – the third (17.70%) are a key policy area in Poland. Surprisingly addressing the needs of older workers and elderly people has the lowest rate.

Conclusion: For Polish respondents improving of infrastructure is generally more important than encouraging people to use ICT.

Question 4: What are the most important barriers to the creation of an e-inclusive society in your country?

ECDL-Foundation survey: Lack of necessary user skills (almost 68%) and ignorance of the fact of how ICT can improve the quality of live (over 62%) are main barriers. It implies that awareness of capabilities of CTI is still very low (fig.3). Popularisation of CTI probably will correct it. Respondents specified a few different barriers (mentioned as Others) like:

·  lack of special equipment and government support to disabled people,

·  lack of ideas formulated by politicians and corporate organisation,

·  lack of strategy for the Information Society supported by government,

·  lack of training materials for disabled individuals,

·  lack of willingness to invest in basic level training.

Figure 3. The most important barriers to the creation of an e-inclusive society

Comparison: Once again technical aspects of e-Inclusion seem to be the most important (limited broadband coverage - 74.36% and high cost of internet access - 56.41%). Comparing to Europe lack of skills and ignorance of advantages are mentioned by more or less a half of respondents from Poland.

Conclusion: Answers of Polish students reaffirm lack of well-developed, inexpensive infrastructure.

Question 5: The EU and the Member States have expressed their special interest in securing the participation of the elderly people to social and economic life. According to your opinion, what would be the 3 most important steps in along term strategy this group?

ECDL-Foundation survey: Launch public campaigns with the aim of rising awareness of the benefits of ICT (over 71%) and ensuring that elderly people will have access to the IT facilities (over 54%) are the most important steps as a long term strategy (fig.4). As Others respondents specified a few steps for successful targeting elderly people as follows:

·  on-line services,

·  providing free or funded training.

Figure 4. The most important steps in a long term strategy of securing the participation of the elderly people to social and economic life

Comparison: Courses on-line and public campaign are indicated as the best solution for this group (69.23% both). The interesting thing is that as opposite to Europe respondents Polish ones consider that financial support of purchase of software or hardware is more important than support of training courses.

Conclusion: Online courses have been chosen by the students as important instrument of e-Inclusion policy. They probably appreciate possibilities which that kind of learning gives, but they are not aware psychological barriers of older people.

Question 6: In your opinion what instrument should be mobilized in the implementation of an e-Inclusion strategy? Please select up to 3 opinions.

ECDL-Foundation survey: According to the survey private - public partnership (over 73%) and public funded and managed project (almost 55%) are the most important instruments of implementation of e-Inclusion strategy (fig.5).

Figure 5. The most effective instrument which could be mobilized in the implementation of an e-Inclusion strategy

Comparison: For Polish respondents projects funded by national or EU authorities is the most effective instrument (66.67%). Subsequent places are occupied with: public founded and managed projects (58.97%, which is more or less on the same level like in ECDL surveys) and cooperation between governments (46.15%).

Conclusions: Low rate of private-public partnership may be an effect of lack of practise in this area. Greater hopes are rested in EU and cooperation between governments.

Final conclusions

Surveys have great weigh to create global e-Inclusion policy as well as a local one. Surveys reveal differences between countries as well as between different social groups.

ECDL Foundation survey on e-Inclusion policy let indicate:

·  social groups threatened with being on the margin of the Information Society,

·  key areas for e-Inclusion policy,

·  the most important barriers,

·  steps in a long time strategy for elderly people,

·  proposed instruments.

The survey on the group of students in Poland let come to following conclusions:

·  it confirms that it is necessary to help older people to include to the Information Society, especially that their situation is worse than in Western Europe (Bulletin, 2007),

·  in Poland infrastructure and cost of access to it are still unsatisfactory.

Bibliography

1.  ECDL Foundation survey on e-Inclusion policy, 2007

2.  Brochure of European Commission Information Society and Media, e-Inclusion, Information Society and Inclusion: Linking European Policies (http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/policy_link/documents/inclusion.pdf), 2006

3.  The Contribution of ICTs to Equal Opportunities and Work-Life-Balance of Informal Careers for Older People, eInclusion@EU Bulletin 4/2007 (http://www.einclusion-eu.org/NewsLetter.asp?MenuID=159), 2007