Orlando Sentinel

Digital divide a hurdle for schools

Race is on to help students with no home internet

- By Meg Kinnard and Maryclaire Dale

WINNSBORO, S.C. — Students struggling to get online in a rural South Carolina county received a boost last week with the arrival of six buses equipped with Wi-Fi, some of the hundreds the state has rolled out since schools were closed by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

With routers mounted inside, the buses broadcast enough bandwidth in an area the size of a small parking lot for parents to drive up and children to access the internet from inside their cars.

One of the buses set up outside the apartment complex of Lacheyle Moore, who had been limiting her own usage to leave enough data on her cellphone plan for her daughter’s schoolwork.

“I have to put extra data on my phone to make sure her work gets done, so she can get graded for it,” said Moore, who works as a cashier and shifted her schedule to help instruct her two children.

The pandemic that launched a massive, unplanned experiment with distance learning has created extraordin­ary hurdles for schoolchil­dren left behind by the digital divide. School districts and government­s are now racing to give the millions of U.S. students without home internet a chance of keeping up.

Nationwide, nearly 3 million students make do without home internet because of the high costs of service and gaps in its availabili­ty. The disadvanta­ged students are more likely to be students of color, from low-income families or in households with lower parental education levels.

The nation’s largest school districts, including Los Angeles and New York, are spending millions of dollars to provide devices and internet connection­s for students. Smaller districts are finding ways to boost wireless internet in school parking lots and distribute hot spots. Still, others are sticking with paper assignment­s and books because the digital equity issues are too much to overcome.

“What we’re seeing is a widening of the achievemen­t gap, so that children who are in well-funded districts were able to immediatel­y pivot to online learning strategies, because the infrastruc­ture was already in place,” said Maura McInerney, legal director of the Education Law Center, which advocates for disadvanta­ged students. “In sharp contrast, underfunde­d districts, who did not have these resources and their children do not have access to Chromebook­s, for example, are scrambling to address the educationa­l needs of students.”

In Fairfield County, South Carolina, 51% of households have no broadband internet access, according to an Associated Press analysis of census data. Nationwide, an estimated 18% of U.S. students do not have home access to broadband internet.

“Lots of mothers and fathers are really not equipped to be home school parents,” said J.R. Green, the school superinten­dent.

Across South Carolina, hundreds of buses were requested by school districts in a program targeting low-income and rural areas, state education spokesman Ryan Brown said. The state was ready to equip thousands of buses, but Brown said that service providers’ offers of low-cost and even free service plans has lessened the demand.

So deep are the equity challenges for the Philadelph­ia School District that it initially prohibited online instructio­n during the shutdown. Only about half the district’s high school students have a laptop or tablet and home internet service. As schools now appear likely to be closed for longer than anticipate­d, the district plans to buy 50,000 Chromebook­s and begin online instructio­n by mid-April.

Comcast, which is based in the city, has raised speeds on its $10-a-month “Internet Essentials”

plan for low-income families and offered two months of free service to new customers.

“We have the $10 internet (plan). It’s not for doing lessons, cause it’s really slow. If we needed to do the Google classroom, we would need, I think, the regular internet, which I can’t afford,” parent Cecelia Thompson, 54, said earlier this month. Thompson, who cannot work because of health issues, lives with her 21year-old son, a district student with severe autism who attends Martin Luther King High School.

She believes they would also need a Chromebook and perhaps a printer, so her son, who has a full-time support person, can do worksheets.

For now, they rely on her cellphone and a 10-year-old tablet.

Some districts also are hoping for some help from the federal government.

Mike Looney, the superinten­dent of Fulton County schools in Georgia, said parents should take advantage of offers for reducedcos­t internet from service providers. But he would also like the

Federal Communicat­ions Commission to redeploy money used to subsidize school internet connection­s to instead pay to supply students with devices and internet at home — an idea that has been endorsed also by many U.S. senators.

In central Ohio, Hilliard City Schools sent students home with school-issued iPads they can use to download, complete and then upload assignment­s. The iPads allow them to do much of their work offline, according to district Superinten­dent John Marschhaus­en, though they’ll need to connect to submit completed work and download new assignment­s.

The district’s two dozen schools are extending their Wi-Fi into their parking lots so families can complete downloads from their vehicles. The superinten­dent said he thinks it will be a smooth transition for most, but he worries about a radical shift for the younger students who typically spend less than half an hour on their devices in the classroom.

“We’re going to have to do a lot of adapting and adjusting and a lot of learning along with our families if this is truly something that will continue into the summer,” he said.

In Columbus, Mississipp­i, WiFi equipment installed on nine buses to allow children to do homework on the way to and from school was transferre­d to school and community buildings after officials discovered routers would only run for two hours after buses were shut off.

But Superinten­dent Cherie Labat said the district is giving out paper lesson packets at schools where meals are being picked up, as well as books that students can take home for independen­t reading. With 100% of students in the predominan­tly African American district eligible for free or reduced price lunches, Labat said she can’t assume students have resources at home.

“That’s why I’m working from the ground up,” she said. “That’s why I’m doing paper.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? Learning guides wait to be distribute­d to students at John H. Webster Elementary School in Philadelph­ia.
MATT ROURKE/AP Learning guides wait to be distribute­d to students at John H. Webster Elementary School in Philadelph­ia.

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