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CT2KCK > HAM 20.10.17 23:06l 86 Lines 4043 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 40902_CT2KCK
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Subj: Reinvention of Amateur Radio
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<IQ2LB<F1OYP<JH4XSY<CT2KCK
Sent: 171020/2205Z 40902@CT2KCK.CTLX.PRT.EU BPQ6.0.13
Reinvention of Amateur Radio
Lack of growth in radio amateur numbers, and how to make Amateur Radio
attractive and relevant to young people, is very much on the minds of
many International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) member societies,
including the Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA).
A common practice is for any organisation, commercial or otherwise, to
reinvent itself about every 10 to 20 years. Think about this process that
happens in the business world, and with community and social activities.
In Australia, we introduced the Limited licence – fondly dubbed the
Z-call, after the first callsign suffix block issued – then the
Novice, and later, the Foundation licence. These responded to the need
for reinvention in their eras. That time has come again, only more
quickly, driven by the exponential growth in technology.
A few years ago, the WIA began work with the regulator, the Australian
Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), to plan a future for
Amateur Radio. Recently, the WIA consulted widely with members and
non-members on the future Licence Condition Determination (LCD). A
review and reform of the LCD is now expected to begin soon, to be
finalised in 2018.
Keeping in mind that a new LCD could remove the barriers that hamper
the use of existing and future technologies, we must also broaden the
scope of Amateur Radio to make it an obvious choice for today’s
tech-savvy young people and for future generations.
It’s time for current radio amateurs to more than ever think about the
future and take action to recruit technically-minded or inquisitive
people
interested in exploring what the dynamic and diverse activities
Amateur Radio offers now, and will continue to develop in the years
ahead.
The recent IARU Region 1 General Conference held a workshop on
‘The Future of Amateur Radio’, and discussed many things that the WIA
has been exploring to make the hobby more attractive and relevant to
today’s technology-rich society. The Region 1 workshop has provided
many ideas from member societies in Europe, Africa, the Middle East
and Northern Asia.
Reprising the Region 1 initiative, “Attracting youth to Amateur Radioö will
be the theme for the late 2018 Conference of IARU Region 3, comprising
member societies across Asia and the Pacific.
The WIA agrees with the two challenges that came out of the Region 1 workshop
• Increasing the inflow to Amateur Radio – particularly from young
people
• Making member societies the “must joinö organisations for all radio
amateurs.
A clear message from the workshop was that, attracting young people
needs to be led by young people. This meant that the use of Twitter,
Facebook and other social media, for example, must be driven by young
people. At the Region 1 Conference, IARU Region 3 Director, Peter
Young VK3MV, spoke about the School Amateur Radio Club Net, showcasing
its website (www.sarcnet.org)
as a resource centre. He also mentioned the STEM – science, technology,
engineering, maths – connection to Amateur Radio and how radio
amateurs can assist teachers in schools with the technical details and
leave the teaching to the professionals.
The WIA may consider that things like experimentation, research and
pioneering – things Amateur Radio was widely known for once, but now
overshadowed by techno-information overload – could be revived with a
broader modern appeal for the hobby. At the same time, Amateur Radio
has to be fun, a way of learning in a classroom setting and through
self-learning, and broadened to embrace pursuits such as IT-wireless,
radio astronomy, radio control, mesh networks and the like.
The Australian Government’s support of innovation, the STEM initiative in
education, the newly-launched national space agency, as well as existing
Maker activities, are all potential pluses for Amateur Radio.
With those dynamic potential changes, Amateur Radio could be a larger
and meaningful part of the community, instead of retreating to a
fading ‘thing’ of the past.
Jim Linton VK3PC
:Wireless Institute of Australia
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