TechByte: Tech Goes Home Helps Community Members Gain Computer Skills
This week we’re taking a look at an awesome program called Tech Goes Home. It’s a program run by The Enterprise Center right here in Chattanooga. It helps people from all backgrounds get the tech skills they need to succeed.
Melissa Callejas, Director of Tech Goes Home told us, “So is a 15 hour digital skills training for anybody in the community we have an array of curriculums from computer basics to older adults, workforce development, veterans telehealth, anything you can think about. It is completely free to you, to the host and to the trainer to have this class and take it and teach it.”
The participants in the class get a Chromebook to use, and at the end of the course they get to keep it.
Ms. Callejas says, “It is a 15 hour course and it can be separated and scheduled out. Whatever time works best for the participant and the trainer. We can offer it in any space that we have in our community, so usually at a church or a school, community center.
The class we observed consisted of a group of teachers and staff at Avondale Head Start. Amanda Blalock served as a trainer for the class. She told us, “They love AI! They absolutely love AI. We’ve done a lot of Gemini and showing them things that Gemini and ChatGPT can do. They absolutely love it. They didn’t realize they could do the amount that it does.”
Ms. Callejas told us “…We have curriculums that go from very basic computer skills from opening your device for the first time to workforce development which this class is a workforce development class. We have small business classes, we have older adults, that’s one of our very popular curriculums.
We really have created curriculums to go into every area of our community and serve them where they need services.
You can find more information about Tech Goes Home by visiting techgoeshomecha.com. They’re a non-profit partner of the city, and many of their services are free.