Closing the Digital Divide: Update From the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Closing the Digital Divide: Update From the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study
Abstract
The authors examined the progress made toward equitable technology access and use over children's first 4 years of school. The sample consisted of 8,283 public school children who attended kindergarten, 1st, and 3rd grades. In 3rd grade, high-poverty schools had significantly more computers for instruction and a smaller ratio of children to computers than did low-poverty schools. Over the first 4 years of school, however, children attending low-poverty schools had significantly more access to home computers than did those attending high-poverty schools. Children's use of computers during 3rd grade differed by school-poverty status. Results indicate that access to, and use of, a home computer, the presence of a computer area in classrooms, frequent use of the Internet, proficiency in computer use, and low-poverty school status were correlated positively with academic achievement. In contrast, frequent use of software for reading was correlated negatively with reading achievement.
Publication
The Journal of Educational Research
Volume
100
Issue
1
Pages
52-60
Date
September 1, 2006
ISSN
0022-0671
Short Title
Closing the Digital Divide
Accessed
19/02/2021, 07:45
Library Catalogue
Taylor and Francis+NEJM
Extra
Publisher: Routledge _eprint: https://doi.org/10.3200/JOER.100.1.52-60
Citation
Judge, S., Puckett, K., & Bell, S. M. (2006). Closing the Digital Divide: Update From the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study. The Journal of Educational Research, 100(1), 52–60. https://doi.org/10.3200/JOER.100.1.52-60