Knowledge Base

All information, experience or best-practices cannot be put into a single-volume handbook: the field of inclusion work is so wide with so many aspects that need to be taken into consideration, and many organisations have different experiences and approaches. All Together does not not end with the creation of ‘handbook’. That is why an opportunity for everybody to contribute their ideas and share their own national projects was created in the community website. This is an open knowledge base, where everybody can add their experience, share proven tools and activities or just search for inspiration in the field of inclusion work. We hope that a community of contributors will emerge around the website and will make All Together continue towards the future.

All information in the knowledge base is structured into ‘projects’. Each project has a description, where visitors can see who is the target group, in which country the project was started and background information such as funding details, context, step-by-step story or challenges faced in practice, and much more. It is important to read this information even when using only one tool from the project, because it explains the context in which the tool was used and what is it designed for. Projects contain tools, notes, events, photos and videos. Tools are the most useful part of the knowledge base. They can be sorted by theme, target age group (remember – general target group is in the project description) and contains all information needed to use the tool in your events. Each tool has a step-by-step guide, materials, setting, debriefing/eva­luation and tips in its description. Notes are like blank papers, that can be used for anything – publishing articles, writing more background information, sharing experience and tips for running projects, describing funding and a lot more. It servers as a general resource. If you want to tell others about an interesting open event you plan to organize, you can use Events. Photos and videos are good for visual information about the project, its setting and how the project was organized.

The website has a sophisticated search form, where the user can get directly to project or tool for a particular theme. It is possible to search for a keyword, or a category (age group, eg. 10–15). Search can be found on the Projects page, and can be performed through projects, tools, notes, events and also videos.