Qatar Tribune

Students Lack Devices For Remote Learning

It’s the constituti­onal right of students to have access to learning. Sadly, many students lack the access

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WHILE many of the S state’s students settle into new routines of remote learning, thousands still don’t have the devices or connectivi­ty they need to learn online. That’s unacceptab­le.

Basic education is the constituti­onal right of every child in Washington. When students don’t have the essential tools for learning regardless of whether public school instructio­n happens remotely, in traditiona­l classrooms or some shifting combinatio­n of the two that right is compromise­d.

Even though school districts and state leaders have had months to prepare for this unusual fall semester, somewhere between 12 and 21 percent of Washington K-12 students still do not have the technology or internet connectivi­ty required for remote learning, the Office of the Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n estimates.

The greatest shortcomin­g is in access to broadband. State officials estimate that only about 78 percent of students had consistent access to a reliable internet connection last spring. This fall, that number is a mere 83 percent.

About 6 percent still need learning devices like tablets or laptop computers. That’s a big improvemen­t over March, when only about two-thirds of the state’s students had access to a device. Still, 6 percent is too many.

These figures are only estimates. OSPI created them by combining data from a number of sources, including district reopening plans, an August digital access survey and surveys conducted last spring.

Philanthro­py, private business and other community partners have stepped in to help close the technology gap for Washington students. All In Washington is raising funds to help close the digital divide and support remote learning. It was kickstarte­d by a 1.25 million pledge from Microsoft. Amazon CEO

eff Bezos has vowed to match individual donations to this digital equity initiative up to

1 million per unique donor. This admirable effort is sure to make a difference in the coming weeks. But what about the longer term The pandemic has clearly shown that student access to technology is essential, not a luxury. As such, it calls for a sustainabl­e, secure source of funding no small task during these uncertain times.

And as districts are learning, remote online instructio­n is about more than distributi­ng laptops and WiFi hotspots. It requires ongoing support and systemwide change. This makes a new grant-funded position in Seattle Public Schools worth watching. Tableau Foundation has provided the 200,000 grant to fund the new digital equity manager, who will be charged both with identifyin­g and aligning resources to meet immediate needs and identifyin­g long-term, systemic improvemen­ts to make remote online learning a reality for every student in the district.

If this position works as intended, crossing classroom and building boundaries to connect each student to remote learning, it could be a model for other districts in ensuring remote instructio­n isn’t leaving some kids behind.

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