The leaders of Siping sub-district have recently found a strong need in elderly residents of their district for learning how to use smart phone. As a highly aging community, Siping is home to a lot of old people who live alone. Some said, owing to not knowing how to use smart phone, they had encountered a lot of difficulties in daily life when they were trying to reach their children, which had already had a bearing on their life quality. In response to this finding, the sub-district had partnered with the volunteers' team of Tongji University to teach these elders how to use smart phone. They are planning to hold over 50 activities in two months, which would benefit 1,000 elders in this district.
How to browse news in your mobile phone, how to follow WeChat public accounts, how to send your children the information of your location, how to buy stuff on your phone, and how to give your friends a video call. These were exactly the subjects of a recently held smart phone operation course, where volunteers from Tongji University "Harmonious Society Theory Research Association" and "Union of Student Party Secretaries" gave over 30 elders a hands-on demonstration of how to use smart phone, and they listened intently and raised questions every now and then.
The courses are delivered by a teacher in collaboration with his team. A member of the students' associations will be the teacher, and other members will be supportive. Each course lasts about 45 minutes, consisting of theory explanation, operation demonstration, and Q&A. Volunteers have also prepared some simple and easy-to-understand booklets for elders to help improve the effects of the courses and help them review what they have learnt after class. The sub-district's volunteering service center has also provided instructive texts about operation of smart phone for 23 volunteers' work stations in the district, so that elders can browse and read them whenever they are in need. During the activity, volunteers have also displayed the QR codes of certain WeChat accounts such as "People's Daily" and "Xinhua News", and by scanning these codes, elders can subscribe to their news.
According the person-of-charge of the district' s volunteering service center, since the beginning of the program, there has been a lot more people signing up the courses than they had expected, and many people who did not sign up, are also arriving, though, "It's estimated that nearly 2,000 people would take part in this year's training sessions."