Re: [DDN] my digital divide article in School Library Journal

2006-03-18 Thread Cindy Lemcke-Hoong
Hello Andy,

We have to keep politicians and others on their toes
on this topic. 

Here is an article written by Ulises A. Mejias I would
like to share with the group. Ulises is an Ed.D
student at Teachers College, Colombia University. He
also teaches a graduate course on Social software. Do
take your time and browse through his website. You
might find many articles that are thought provoking
just like I did and still do. 

In Defense of the Digital Divide as Paralogy (v 1.0)

by Ulises A. Mejias
Introduction: Why Won't Lyotard Go Away?

http://ideant.typepad.com/ideant/2006/02/in_defense_of_t.html#comments

[EMAIL PROTECTED]


 Here's a link to the full text of the article in
 case you're interested 
 in reading it:
 

http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6312460.html
 
 -andy


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[DDN] my digital divide article in School Library Journal

2006-03-17 Thread Andy Carvin

Hi everyone,

School Library Journal has just published a feature story of mine in 
their latest issue. It's called The Gap, and it examines how the 
digital divide, as a policy issue, has fallen off the radar screens of 
politicians and the media, while marginalized communities continue to be 
left behind.


Some highlights from the article:

This year, 2006, marks the 10th anniversary of the advent of the 
digital divide—a major societal challenge that, sadly, has been pushed 
aside and forgotten in recent years.


Rewind to 1996: middle-class Americans were just beginning to 
explore the possibilities of the Internet as a tool for education, civic 
engagement, and entertainment. Yet less affluent citizens, lacking the 
necessary skills and exposure, did not enjoy the same access to these 
opportunities.


The so-called “Digital Divide” made prominent headlines that year 
when high-profile pundits, from President Bill Clinton to network news 
anchors, popularized the term in addressing the growing inequities that 
appeared to accompany the technological revolution. Today, however, 
you’re not likely to hear much mention of the digital divide on the news 
or your favorite political blog. As with other political and social 
issues, conversation about the digital divide ebbs and flows—and for 
several years now we’ve been wallowing at a low watermark


... Unfortunately, the digital divide is rarely addressed as a 
major policy issue in America. But as the U.S. struggles to improve its 
schools, while dragging its heels at improving our national broadband 
infrastructure, countries like India and China are churning out highly 
skilled young people for their workforces. At the same time, Nordic 
countries and Korea deploy ubiquitous Internet access. Other nations are 
creating government ministries to spur technological and educational 
innovation, while American digital divide policies have fallen off the 
docket. America is losing its competitiveness because we’re not making 
the necessary investments in education and infrastructure.


Fortunately, there is still positive work being done. The federal 
e-rate program continues to enable low-income schools and libraries to 
connect to the Internet, while nonprofit and private sector entities 
invest in local and national efforts dedicated to bridging the gap. 
Meanwhile, copyright initiatives like Creative Commons ease the way for 
people to publish their own content for broad public use. And open 
courseware initiatives from universities, such as MIT, are making some 
of the most coveted curriculum freely available, whether you can afford 
to attend the brick-and-mortar institutions or not


Here's a link to the full text of the article in case you're interested 
in reading it:


http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6312460.html

-andy
--
--
Andy Carvin
acarvin (at) edc . org
andycarvin (at) yahoo . com

http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://www.andycarvin.com
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