Monday, August 31, 2020
Access to the Internet: A Challenge Not Always So Easy to Solve
I am writing this blog post while the Google Fiber
technician is doing his installation work at my house, because our existing
cable access to the internet is barely sufficient for my husband’s teaching
over zoom. As the technician explained,
our download speeds might be fast, but our upload speeds are capped by the
cable company, making zoom and facetime and similar live-video-stream
connections frequently pause in mid-sentence.
I’m one of the lucky ones – I can afford to pay for whichever internet
access service best suits our family’s needs and multiple services are
available in my neighborhood.
This blog post is the second in a series
that explores the barriers to
allowing anyone anywhere to obtain quality education online (the Straube
Foundation’s mission). The first post
analyzed the challenge of universal access to online learning-capable devices
(laptop computers and tablets). Today’s
post will look at the challenge of accessing the internet to take advantage of
online learning opportunities.
Students’ lack of access to the internet has been called
“the homework gap,” “a national crisis,”
an “educational
crisis.” While I will focus on the
lack of access to internet in the United States, this is an international
problem.
Before the coronavirus changed our daily lives, students of
all ages went to their schools, libraries, community centers and other public
places to access the internet. Now, in
the time of Covid, these places are closed and free access to the internet is much
harder to find. A picture
of two elementary school children in California sitting in the parking lot of a
Taco Bell restaurant to access the wifi for their online lessons went viral
recently. College
students have been seen spending the day in their cars in a parking lot to
access the wifi from adjacent businesses.
That is a resourceful solution to the internet access problem, but not a
sustainable one.
Some
communities are trying to provide Covid-protective community center
locations to give those who need it access to the internet. While this is well-intentioned, I don’t know
that I would feel safe spending much time doing my studies in such places. I hope these communities will maintain these
internet hubs in the post-Covid era, as that will be very useful.
Many schools and local governments have been giving
away wifi hot spots to students that don’t currently have internet access. Many of the laptops and tablets that are being
given to needy students, as discussed in my previous
post, include wifi hot spots. This strategy
assumes, however, that the communities in which the students live have good
internet coverage. In many rural parts
of the US, including the Navajo
Nation, this is not the case, meaning that students have to figure out
where to take their new hot-spot containing device to be able to access the online
classes they need to attend.
Some college students are renting large houses (college
collab houses), in part to emulate the dorm experience their colleges are
not providing this fall, and in part to ensure that they have the access to
internet they’ll need to do their coursework online.
Education policy makers are making the argument
that universal broadband coverage – internet access for all – should be considered
a public utility, an essential feature of everyday life, much as we consider
electricity and culinary water. The
quest for universal broadband coverage will require two separate actions: installation of internet infrastructure that
reaches all populated areas of the country, and attention to the affordability
of the available internet coverage. The US
House of Representatives considered providing funding to address the
affordability issue as part of the first coronavirus stimulus bill.
Online education requires access to the internet. Providing that access to all students, free
of charge, is a laudable goal, but difficult to implement. The solutions have to be tailored to the students’
specific situations and geography.
Saturday, August 15, 2020
Back-to-School Online Resources in Continued Times of Coronavirus
It’s getting time for schools to reopen, with each school
district and higher education institution taking a different approach in these
continued times of Covid-19. Some are
starting the school year with in-person classes, some are doing all instruction
online, some are doing a hybrid. Even
those schools starting in person may end up going online at a moment’s notice
(see, e.g., what
happened the first day of school in a county outside Atlanta, Georgia after
a child tested positive).
Here are a few back-to-school resources we’ve recently collected:
·
Smithsonian
museums streaming individual programs, multi-part courses,
studio arts classes, and virtual study tours inspired by their research,
collections and exhibitions.
·
Financial
assistance resources for special needs students during online learning.
·
Supplement
distance learning from traditional K-12 schools with student- and subject-specific
targeted learning programs. Khan Academy is one source for such
content, free of charge in many cases.
·
On Call Tutoring
offers STEM tutoring online for high school students and college undergrads. Sample lesson available here. They are fundraising to offer their services
to low-income students.
·
Over 450
college courses from Harvard and other top-ranking schools are available
for free.
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