Digital Equity

ensuring digital equity and technology access for all students

  1. Digital Inclusion: Why Is It So Important In Education?

    Digital Inclusion: Why Is It So Important In Education?
    With information and communications technology (ICT) generally regarded as one of the top sectors across the current workforce, the need for digital literacy proficiencies are now much more urgent across education and that starts with improving digital inclusion and equity in every classroom. We all can help slim the digital divide so digital inclusion is a right not a privilege.
  2. Striving For Equality And Starting With Equity In Education

    Striving For Equality And Starting With Equity In Education
    Whether it is recovering from remote learning setbacks, addressing gaps in technology access, or focusing on SEL recovery, things got really tough on many students. Plus, since not all students in all geographical areas and of all socioeconomic backgrounds have access to all the same opportunities, it’s easy to understand that certain achievement gaps will persist.
  3. Student Mental Health And Their Screen Time

    Student Mental Health And Their Screen Time
    While other pandemic-induced issues, like inequity, isolation, relationships, and SEL have been crucial focal areas, the effects of too much screen time on their daily development have also caught up with many students. As we continue to hone in on student mental health concerns, it’s often important for parents and educators to keep digital wellbeing in focus for kids.
  4. Eduporium Weekly | The Digital Divide and Learning

    Eduporium Weekly | The Digital Divide and Learning
    It’s been a long 15 months since the pandemic upended the education world. Aside from necessitating emergency instruction and compelling parents to worry about their child’s intellectual and social development, another key factor has emerged. We knew there was a digital divide among our students, but may not have known how bad it really was.
  5. Eduporium Weekly | EdTech, Equity, and Inclusion

    Eduporium Weekly | EdTech, Equity, and Inclusion
    Equity in remote learning involves more than just connectivity—though that is the main component. Disparities in reliable Internet access have resulted in varying levels of remote learning quality. On the other hand, keeping students safe (plus other needs) in a virtual world also involve equity considerations.
  6. Eduporium Weekly | More Equity In Distance Learning

    Eduporium Weekly | More Equity In Distance Learning
    For thousands of children, physically attending school in person is the only notable way they can connect with others. It may be because they’re living in very rural areas without guaranteed Internet access or they may struggle with economic limits that prevent them from paying for an Internet plan but these newly illuminated inequities in remote learning aren’t really new.
  7. Eduporium Weekly | Talking About Tech Equity

    Eduporium Weekly | Talking About Tech Equity
    In the last few years, more focus has been put on digital or technological equity and a strong push has been made to ensure that every student has access to tech tools that help them grow. This is important not only because technology affords students with enriched opportunities, but it also helps prepare them for a lot of the challenges
  8. Eduporium Weekly | Welcome to 2017

    Eduporium Weekly | Welcome to 2017
    We have a feeling that 2017 is going to be a good one for education, technology, and the pair’s relationship. With that being said, it’s not too early to take a look at what lies ahead for EdTech this coming year. The trends and tendencies are popping up everywhere and include things like virtual reality, coding, collaboration, and, yes, more
  9. Eduporium Weekly | For Digital Learning And Digital People

    Eduporium Weekly | For Digital Learning And Digital People
    Think about it. Today’s adults spend most of their working day using a computer to carry out a range of responsibilities from communication to projects and everything in between. They use programs, websites and office productivity software. Most of them probably also learned the specific, tech skills for their job once they had already accepted it.

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