Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Using Early Childhood Education to Bridge the Digital Divide




Technology literacy plays an important role in a child's ability to succeed in school and later life. Yet, despite rapid growth in society's use of digital technology, many children in low-income families in the United States are not able to access and use technology in the same ways as their more-advantaged peers. This means they have fewer opportunities to learn, explore, and communicate digitally, and fewer chances to develop the workforce skills they will need to succeed in later life. Early childhood education can play a valuable role in ensuring that low-income children can access technology and learn how to use it. However, there are a number of important issues that need to be addressed. This Perspective frames a discussion on these subjects by exploring the role of early childhood education in bridging the digital divide. We highlight five key questions that need to be considered in the discussion of integrating technology into early childhood education.



Key Findings

Early Childhood Education Prepares Children for School and Provides an Opportunity to Address Disparities
Children who participate in early childhood education achieve better education and life outcomes, with the strongest impacts for children from low-income families.
Early childhood is an important time to build foundational skills in traditional academic areas, and may play a similar role for technology literacy.



Technology Literacy Opens the Door to Many of Life's Opportunities
Those who use technology in the workplace earn 14–27 percent more than those who do not, and projections indicate that much of the country's future job growth will be concentrated in areas that require use of information and communications technology on the job.

Technology Can Also Open the Door to New Learning Opportunities for Young Children

Studies have shown that ICT can build motor skills, socio-emotional skills, and cognitive skills, helping to reduce skill gaps in important foundational areas for disadvantaged young children.
However, there is debate over the impact of technology on young children, and many continue to feel that the role of technology should remain limited.
Supports Are Needed to Realize the Benefits of Technology in ECE
High-quality Internet connectivity, developmentally appropriate software, and smart and portable devices are helpful in supporting educational technology efforts, as well as family support.
Even if the most up-to-date software-device-connection combination is present, it may not be usable if there is no one to guide the child. The real value is derived from the presence of a high-quality knowledge facilitator.


2 comments:

  1. This information helps a lot according to the understanding of how digital divide has been bridged in south Africa.I can now understand how important digital divide plays in our daily lives,as we live in a world which needs more skills on how to adapt or operate technological equipments and internet accesses

    ReplyDelete
  2. This information helps a lot according to the understanding of how digital divide has been bridged in south Africa.I can now understand how important digital divide plays in our daily lives,as we live in a world which needs more skills on how to adapt or operate technological equipments and internet accesses

    ReplyDelete