Coronavirus pandemic shines light on deep digital divide in U.S. amid efforts to narrow it
A coalition of businesses and philanthropic organizations in the city is working to provide every student, kindergarten through 12th grade, with a tablet computer and high-speed Internet access. The program — called Connected Futures and led by DTE Energy, Skillman Foundation, Quicken Loans, the city of Detroit and the school district — is spending $23 million in what Superintendent Nikolai Vitti hailed as “an unprecedented investment to immediately address an unprecedented crisis.”
The Detroit project is only one of many around the country aimed at trying to close the digital divide, which puts millions of students who are already marginalized at even further disadvantage. It is estimated that up to 12 million students — and some of their teachers — don’t have Internet access at home, and many of the 13,000 U.S. school districts don’t have the resources to provide what is needed without outside help.
Rural areas are especially hard-hit, as are high-poverty areas, while schools and families struggle to keep up learning programs with school buildings closed and students at home. The digital divide is not new, but the crisis facing the country has laid bare just how deep and damaging it is.
School districts around the country, such as Miami-Dade in Florida, have been working with local Internet service providers to obtain free or reduced-price Internet connections, and there are efforts on Capitol Hill to provide billions of dollars in new funding to provide access to virtual education to CONTINUE READING: New efforts to close America’s deep digital divide - The Washington Post