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January 28, 2011

The Digital Divide of Usage Instead of Access (Part of a continuing series on education in the 21st century)

About two weeks ago, I was working with my English language arts class on a literary analysis essay they were peer editing. One student’s partner had to leave class early, so I encouraged the two of them to work together at home electronically via email or some other program; one of the students replied, “Yeah, no problem, we can just do it over Skype.”

Right about that same time, this article appeared in the Denver Post in which it reported on the use of the internet by minority populations. Even though the article focused on race, I suspect there is a certain amount of socioeconomics that factors in as well, particularly since it refers to the use of smartphones and the like to access the internet which are much less expensive than a computer, particularly if given the choice between a phone with internet access included or a computer with internet access as a financial add-on. While a smartphone can get you online, you can still do more online with an actual computer, and that seemingly small difference is actually pretty huge.

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