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Canada 3.0 event looks to attract IT pros

Canada 3.0 event looks to attract IT pros

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 19 May 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Canada’s future as a digital media leader requires the private sector to work with government and academia on a coherent strategy, according to conference organizers

And digitizing the content sitting in government, libraries, media organizations and academic institutions is only one part of the strategy, he said, adding that finding ways to benefit from the content is also needed.

“The Obama administration has already signaled loud and clear how important this is,” Jenkins said. “They’re going to start with health records, but just the way Obama ran his campaign shows that he understands the power of digital networks.”

Canada’s early strength in the digital media realm could decline fairly quickly if these issues are not addressed, Coates added.

In addition to discussing Canadian policy, conference goers will also be able to interact with academic leaders and work on ways to better prepare young people for digital media careers, said Kevin Tuer, managing director at CDMN and the co-chair of the conference’s digital media research and commercialization stream.

“It’s all well and good for individual companies to look at their place in the value chain, but we also need to examine the future generation of our workforce,” he said.

Open Text became one of the sponsors of the new Stratford Institute because it couldn’t find enough people to hire that have the cross-skill sets needed in the new digital economy.

“They need to know how to develop a plot line, and set up the lighting and sound, but at the same time, they need to have coding experience,” Jenkins said. “We hope the Stratford campus graduates students that specialize in those disciplines and that’s why Canada 3.0 is located there.”

For Coates, training students for a particular field was much easier 30 years ago, as most companies worked in a fairly predictable and structured manner. Today, social and digital media is driving changes in the world so quickly and in an unstructured fashion, which has led to the need for new ways of teaching.

“Is the lecture format the right way to go, can we bring in more project-based teachings, how do we develop a real independence of mind within the student population, what is the balance of technical proficiency and creativity needed,” Coates asked. “Those are questions we often ask in isolation and if you wanted to summarize the idea of Canada 3.0, it’s basically listening to each other and creating a common strategy.”

“It’s really hard to say to the private sector that we’re doing what you want if you haven’t spoken to the private sector,” he added.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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