Survey Finds 85% of Underserved Students Have Access To Only One Digital Device (educationdive.com)
A new research [PDF] on students who took the ACT test, conducted by the ACT Center for Equity in Learning, found that 85% of underserved (meaning low income, minority, or first generation in college) students had access to only one device at home, most often a smartphone. From a blog post: American Indian/Alaskan, Hispanic/Latino, and African American students had the least access. White and Asian students had the most. Nearly a quarter of students who reported that family income was less that $36,000 a year had access to only a single device at home, a 19% gap compared to students whose family income was more than $100,000.
...they're not just trendy?
A lot of under-25 people I know only have a smartphone. No desktop, no laptop, not even a TV set.
Just a phone - with access to the entire Internet.
underserved (meaning low income, minority, or first generation in college)
So ... being a minority, by definition, means you are underserved? Being the first person in your family to go to college means you are being underserved?
This sort of "words no longer mean anything" crap has completely swamped the entire educational establishment.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
Comcast will sell you 15Mb Internet for $10/mth and a brand new computer for $150.
https://www.internetessentials...
The US is littered with used computers. Just ask around and you will find some spare ones and can avoid the $150.
* Lump all black socio economic groups together as simply "African-American."
* Break whites down, somewhat, by socio-economic group.
That's how they skew the results and make it look like being a minority is intrinsically a doomed position. It is guaranteed to drown out the story of the black middle class.
If you read TFA, the percentage of "underserved" kids with access to only one device is 19% (compared to 6% for "served" kids). Nowhere near as alarming as 85%.
Of the students who have access to only one computing device, 85% are "underserved", 15% are not. That's where the 85% figure comes from. I'd cut and paste the relevant quotes, but the PDF has the stupid no-copy flag.
The US is littered with used computers. Just ask around and you will find some spare ones and can avoid the $150.
Another good option: FreeGeek in Portland (and on Wikipedia if you want to see some of the other locations).
It has to do with history. Low Income people, minorities, and people who are the first of their families in college have historically had a very hard time getting ahead in the US. It's a fact. Sorry that upsets you so much, snowflake.
I don't respond to AC's.
The US is littered with used computers. Just ask around and you will find some spare ones and can avoid the $150.
Yep. I recently took about 50 computers and enough parts to build 50 more to the scrap yard. They pay $2 per pound for disassembled computers and 5 cents per pound for fully assembled computers. I took several dozen apart and made $100 and then sold the rest for the 5 cents because it wasn't worth my time to disassemble them. I regularly see computers on the curb on trash day and you have to PAY to dispose of CRTs. I disposed of several 19 inch and 21 inch CRTs that likely have much better picture quality and refresh rates than most of the cheap LCDs they currently sell. Nobody wants them.