The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19

This paper investigated the digital divide among students of a state university in the Philippines in relation to its implementation of technology-led flexible learning due to the CoViD-19 pandemic. The study focused on two major factors of the digital gap: location (urban vs rural) and socio-econom...

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Main Author: Talandron-Felipe, May Marie P
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2020
Subjects:
ICT
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/discs-faculty-pubs/258
https://apsce.net/icce/icce2020/index.html@p=2159.html
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
id ph-ateneo-arc.discs-faculty-pubs-1273
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.discs-faculty-pubs-12732022-03-03T08:01:08Z The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19 Talandron-Felipe, May Marie P This paper investigated the digital divide among students of a state university in the Philippines in relation to its implementation of technology-led flexible learning due to the CoViD-19 pandemic. The study focused on two major factors of the digital gap: location (urban vs rural) and socio-economic (income clusters). Results provided further evidence that geographic location and income affect digital inequality among students. Both aspects have an impact on device ownership, stable internet connection at home, and frequency of access. Prior online learning experience also shows dependency on a student’s geographic location. Location groups and the alternative ways to access the internet have a significant relationship where students from urban areas are more likely to spend money for temporary data subscription, go to internet cafes, or use their neighbor’s, friends’, and relative’s Wi-Fi connection. On the other hand, those from rural areas are more likely to utilize free data and free Wi-Fi in public areas or have no other means to connect at all. The students were also categorized based on the context of flexible learning implementation of the university: those with device and with connectivity, with device but no connectivity, no device and no connectivity. For each category, different support initiatives were developed including utilization of school’s ICT facilities, funds for internet subscription, and tablet lending. The study emphasized that school administrators and teachers must take digital divide into consideration in crafting instruction, support guidelines, and policies for flexible learning. A follow up study is also recommended to validate the effectiveness of the university’s ICT support initiatives presented in this paper. 2020-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/discs-faculty-pubs/258 https://apsce.net/icce/icce2020/index.html@p=2159.html Department of Information Systems & Computer Science Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Digital Divide CoViD-19 ICT Flexible Learning
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Digital Divide
CoViD-19
ICT
Flexible Learning
spellingShingle Digital Divide
CoViD-19
ICT
Flexible Learning
Talandron-Felipe, May Marie P
The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19
description This paper investigated the digital divide among students of a state university in the Philippines in relation to its implementation of technology-led flexible learning due to the CoViD-19 pandemic. The study focused on two major factors of the digital gap: location (urban vs rural) and socio-economic (income clusters). Results provided further evidence that geographic location and income affect digital inequality among students. Both aspects have an impact on device ownership, stable internet connection at home, and frequency of access. Prior online learning experience also shows dependency on a student’s geographic location. Location groups and the alternative ways to access the internet have a significant relationship where students from urban areas are more likely to spend money for temporary data subscription, go to internet cafes, or use their neighbor’s, friends’, and relative’s Wi-Fi connection. On the other hand, those from rural areas are more likely to utilize free data and free Wi-Fi in public areas or have no other means to connect at all. The students were also categorized based on the context of flexible learning implementation of the university: those with device and with connectivity, with device but no connectivity, no device and no connectivity. For each category, different support initiatives were developed including utilization of school’s ICT facilities, funds for internet subscription, and tablet lending. The study emphasized that school administrators and teachers must take digital divide into consideration in crafting instruction, support guidelines, and policies for flexible learning. A follow up study is also recommended to validate the effectiveness of the university’s ICT support initiatives presented in this paper.
format text
author Talandron-Felipe, May Marie P
author_facet Talandron-Felipe, May Marie P
author_sort Talandron-Felipe, May Marie P
title The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19
title_short The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19
title_full The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19
title_fullStr The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19
title_full_unstemmed The Digital Divide among Students and Support Initiatives in the Time of Covid-19
title_sort digital divide among students and support initiatives in the time of covid-19
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2020
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/discs-faculty-pubs/258
https://apsce.net/icce/icce2020/index.html@p=2159.html
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