The Oklahoman

Families without internet face tough choice on school

- By Piper Hudspeth Blackburn

BEAT TY VILLE, Ky .— John Ross worries about his children returning to their classrooms this fall with corona virus cases rising in Kentucky, but he feels he doesn't have much of a choice: His family's limited internet access makes it nearly impossible for the kids to keep up with schoolwork from home.

“They' re going to have their education,” the father of three in rural Lee County said as he recalled his children's struggles to do their work this spring over a spotty cellphone connection.

Lee County, a community of around 7,000 people deep in the Appalachia­n Mountains, is one of many rural school districts around the country where the decision over whether to bring students back into classrooms is particular­ly fraught. As in other places, parents and officials are concerned about the virus, but dramatical­ly limited internet access here also means kids could fall seriously behind if the pandemic keeps them home again.

On average, the United States is still seeing about 1,000 deaths a day from the virus, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The country has had more t han 5 million confirmed cases and more than 167,000 deaths over the course of the pandemic.

Roughly 3 million students across the United States don't have access to a home internet connection. A third of households with school-age children that do not have home internet cite the expense as the main reason, according to federal Education Department statistics. But in some rural places, a reliable connection can't be had at any price.

The void is especially acute in eastern Kentucky. An AP analysis of census data shows that nearly half of students attending public school in Lee lack home access to broadband.

Many districts have been scrambling to set up paperbased alternativ­es to online instructio­n or create WiFi hot spots in school parking lots and other public areas. Kentucky's two largest districts, in Louisville and Lexington, are starting the school year online and have pledged to give mobile hot spots to students who don't have internet at home. Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear said this week the state is exploring ways to expand internet access in hard-toreach areas.

But if school starts as scheduled on Aug. 24 in Lee, which serves roughly 800 students, there will be only two public WiFi hot spots in the county: one at the county courthouse, and another at the public library — both near downtown Beattyvill­e, the county seat, and a good distance from the winding, tree-lined roads where most residents live.

Students aren't the only ones who struggled this past spring. Some teachers had to go into their classrooms to get internet access, despite recommenda­tions that they stay home, according to Lee County School Superinten­dent Sarah Wasson.

In an effort to accommodat­e those without reliable internet, students will submit their work periodical­ly on USB drives. In between, teachers can check in with them over the phone.

The lack of internet access often dovetails with and is likely to reinforce other inequaliti­es. Nationally, those without access are more likely to be students of color, from low-income families or in households with lower parental education levels. In Lee County, for instance, almost half of children live below the poverty line. As the pandemic stretches on, Americans with lower incomes who do have internet may struggle to continue to afford it.

“COVID- 1 9 has shown cracks in the system where people have been left behind,” said Lee County Judge Executive Chuck Caudill.

Beattyvill­e Mayor Scott Jackson remembers the fight more than a half-century ago to get clean, running water into the county. Now, he sees the internet as just as important, in order to help create jobs and encourage businesses to move into the empty storefront­s on Beattyvill­e's main street.

 ?? [BRYAN WOOLSTON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Barlow Mitchell sits outside the Lee County Public Library while using the public WI-FI on July 29 in Beattyvill­e, Ky.
[BRYAN WOOLSTON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Barlow Mitchell sits outside the Lee County Public Library while using the public WI-FI on July 29 in Beattyvill­e, Ky.

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