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Foundation Staff
The Learning Access Institute has a small full-time staff, led by Willem Scholten, it's Executive Director. Many of its projects rely on part-time expertise in many cases
obtained through strong collaboration with students and faculty of the University of Washington.
Willem Scholten
Executive Director
Voice: (206)-286-4464
willem@learningaccess.org
Willem Scholten brings with him more than 13 years of experience in developing technology solutions with a "social conscience" in the academic and public interest
environment. He is one of the country's foremost experts in public access computing. Over the past seven years, Willem has been instrumental in the conception, development
and implementation of one of the country's leading initiatives attempting to close the digital divide by partnering with public libraries. First, as a researcher at Seattle
Public Library and a key partner with Microsoft in the development of the Libraries Online pilot program and later, as the key founding member and President of the Technology
Resource Institute, he worked on taking the Libraries Online project to the next stage, culminating in the formation of the Gates Library Foundation.
As Executive Director of the Technology Resource Institute, Willem was instrumental in developing, in partnership with the Gates Library Foundation, the strategic goals and
implementation strategies of the US Library program, a $200 million grant program. This program attempts to bring public access computing and access to the Internet to
under-served areas in the US, by partnering with public libraries in reaching its target audience. Willem successfully led the implementation effort in 8 states and
approximately 1,500 library buildings, introducing over 15,000 PC' into local libraries.
In the Fall of 1998, the Gates Library Foundation and the Technology Resource Institute merged to form the Gates Learning Foundation and Willem became Executive Director of
the Gates Center for Technology Access. In this role, he continued leading the library initiative's implementation which is currently expected to be completed by the Fall of
2003. After this successful merger and the forming of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in the Fall of 1999, Willem decided that he wanted to return to an environment
that would allow him to have a more direct involvement in technology development and its application in resource poor settings. As such, Willem together with a number of
colleagues returned to working on issues of the ever growing gap between those who can and those who can not fully participate in the emerging information society and
therefore run the risk of being "information disenfranchised" and "learning deprived." In particularly he has focused his efforts on solutions for small and often under
funded public and school libraries.
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