Digital divide and access to online education: new evidence from Tamil Nadu, India.

IF 1.1 Q3 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
K Jafar, Kripa Ananthpur, L Venkatachalam
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The pandemic and the long closure of educational institutions have changed the learning and teaching practices across the globe. A massive and unplanned shift towards online education with unequal access to digital infrastructure deepens the existing digital divide and socio-economic inequalities. Tamil Nadu Covid Pulse Survey shows the state's commitment to strengthening evidence-based policymaking and continuing its welfare tradition including its efforts to provide uninterrupted education during the crisis. Based on the three recent rounds of the panel survey conducted in October 2020 and August 2021, this article discusses Tamil Nadu's experience in continuing education during the pandemic. The result highlights the existing digital divide and challenges faced by students in accessing online education. Some of the government initiatives like Kalvi TV telecasting classes for school students have been effective in addressing the digital divide between rural and urban areas in the state and making its education system more inclusive.

数字鸿沟与在线教育:来自印度泰米尔纳德邦的新证据。
疫情和教育机构的长期关闭改变了全球的学习和教学实践。向在线教育的大规模和无计划的转变,以及对数字基础设施的不平等访问,加深了现有的数字鸿沟和社会经济不平等。泰米尔纳德邦新冠肺炎脉搏调查显示,该邦致力于加强循证政策制定,并继续其福利传统,包括在危机期间努力提供不间断的教育。基于2020年10月和2021年8月进行的最近三轮小组调查,本文讨论了泰米尔纳德邦在疫情期间继续教育的经验。这一结果突显了现有的数字鸿沟以及学生在接受在线教育方面面临的挑战。政府的一些举措,如卡尔维电视台为学生开设的电视直播课程,有效地解决了该州农村和城市地区之间的数字鸿沟,并使其教育系统更具包容性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
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