This is a recording of our Advanced Training webinar. Here is a description:
This training will go beyond the basics and will help you maximize the potential of the website to make customized maps, upload your own data, promote your community’s story, and more! After this training you will have the tools to:
- Customize the display of your data to effectively explain an issue
- Compare Communities & Rank geographies choosing from multiple indicators
- Analyze demographic, health and socioeconomic data
- Upload your own data and neighborhood boundaries
- Tell your community’s story
5. GOVERNMENTONLINE MAPPING TECHNOLOGY www.HealthyCity.org COMMUNITY RESEARCH LAB Training community groups to lead and sustain action-oriented research & technology projects …is an information + action resource that unites rigorous research, community voices and innovative technologiesto solve the root causes of social inequity
6. Partners Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Advancement Project USC School of Social Work 2-1-1 LA County United Ways of California Children Now California Pan-Ethnic Health Network Ella Baker Center for Human Rights Prevention Institute The California Endowment Legal Services of No. Cal. California Rural Legal Assistance Sacramento Housing Alliance UC Davis – Center for Regional Change Community Services Planning Council United Way Bay Area Santa Clara Comm. Benefits Coalition Urban Strategies Council San Mateo Healthy Communities Collaborative Oakland Progressive Empowerment Network Contra Costa Crisis Center United Way of Fresno/2-1-1 2-1-1 San Diego 2-1-1 Monterey County 2-1-1 San Bernardino Volunteer Center of Riverside County United Way Bay Area/Helplink Community Service Planning Council – 2-1-1 Sacramento UW Silicon Valley/Santa Clara Eden I & R – 211 Alameda Interface Children Family Services – 2-1-1 Ventura Volunteer Center of Sonoma County
7. Case Manager Funder Service Provider HealthyCity.org Website Community Organizer Policy Advocate Researcher …to fuel social change and improve our communities Who does HealthyCity.org support? Grant Writer
9. Types of Data on HealthyCity.org Services & Points Social Services & Nonprofits Hospitals and FQHCs Public & Private Schools Grocery Stores & WIC Vendors Alcohol Outlets & Toxic Sites And much more…
10. Services & Points Social Service data from 2-1-1 (Includes: Basic Needs, Legal Services, Education, Health Care, Employment, and many other Community Services) Over 30,000 Service sites across California in the following counties: Alameda, Contra Costa, Fresno, Los Angeles, Marin, Monterey, Napa, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Clara, Solano, Sonoma, Ventura
11. Types of Data on HealthyCity.org Thematic Population Characteristics Civic Participation Employment, Income & Poverty Health Conditions, Diseases, Injuries and Deaths Crime & Public Safety Housing And much more…
13. Today you will learn how to: Customize the display of your data to effectively understand or explain an issue Analyze demographic, health and socioeconomic datausing charts & tables Learn about the Account & Share & Connect featuresthat enable you to Tell your Story
14. 1. Customize the display of your data to effectively understand or explain an issue You can save and share anything you create while logged in GET STARTED!
15. Click on Change to select your area of interest You want to advocate for services in Spanish for areas in San Diego where there is a high concentration of Spanish speakers.
101. Start a live mapping session Tell your Story (with your saved maps, links, reports, multi-media and more)
102. Create a Story to: Promote your initiative or highlight your work! Package your saved maps, live mapping sessions, reports, multi-media and more into a “story” that you can share Tell your Story
HC.org provides these people with data and technology to support their work within and on behalf of our communities. HC.org helps encourage data-driven planning and inform policy within sectors such as Education, Public Safety, Health, Public Health, Government, etc.
The next two slides show two major ‘types’ of data – point & thematic.
DATA & TECHNOLOGY HealthyCity.org allows users to search for local services, conduct research and connect with their communities. Beyond providing free access to the largest database of community services and localized data variables, HealthyCity.org offers the ability for users to “tell their own story” by uploading their own data or multimedia to the system.More about www.HealthyCity.org:Locate Resources: Focusing on one of our key goals to help families find resources through intermediaries such as case managers, social workers, etc., we display LA County 2-1-1 social service resources. We are partnering with 2-1-1 agencies in other regions of California in order to display that data and increase accessibility to resources.Conduct Analysis: HealthyCity.org has the capacity to map community characteristics (over 2300 variables) such as demographic, health, economic, park/green space, etc. You can create community profiles and find gaps in services in relation to need. With the statewide expansion, Healthy City has expanded crime and public safety data, as well as new statewide health data, child welfare and public assistance data. Web 2.0 Features: Users can upload their own points of interest, create their own neighborhood boundaries, and save maps! For the statewide platform, Healthy City users will be able to create online affinity groups and share maps, charts, videos, pictures, and comments with partners across California.
(Uploading Data and multi-media, Creating neighborhood boundaries, Saving searches maps and more!)
*Story can be found in Share & Connect room (if public, or if a private group and a member is logged in); Story can be embedded on a website