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Racial Divide Found in Kids' Internet Use
Many more white children use
the Internet than Latino and black students, a reminder that going online is
hardly a way of life for everyone. Two of every three white
students — 67 percent — use the Internet, but less than half of blacks and
Latinos do, according to federal data released Tuesday. For Latinos, the figure
is 44 percent; for blacks, it's 47 percent. "This creates incredible
barriers for minorities," said Mark Lloyd, a senior fellow at the Center for
American Progress and an analyst on how communications influence civil
rights. Not using the Internet
"narrows their ability to even think about the kind of work they can be doing,"
Lloyd said. "It doesn't prepare them for a world in which they're going to be
expected to know how to do these things."
The new data come from
the It is based on a national
survey of households in 2003. Overall, 91 percent of
students in nursery school through 12th grade use computers; 59 percent use the
Internet. Within those numbers, the
digital divide between groups is a national concern. Studies have shown that
access and ability to use the Internet help improve people's learning, job
prospects and daily living. Schools have taken steps
to close the gaps. Virtually all
That's not the case at
home. Some 54 percent of white
students use the Internet at home, compared with 26 percent of Latino and 27
percent of black youngsters. Limited access at home can erode a student's
ability to research assignments, explore college scholarships or just get
comfortable going online. Among other
findings: •Household income, parent
education and whether the home has two parents all correlate with higher
computer and Internet use. •Public-school students
are more likely than private school students to use both computers and the
Internet. •The gender gap in
computer use has all but disappeared; girls are as likely as boys to use the
Internet. Kids use the Internet most often
for completing school assignments, the new study says. But they also count on it
for e-mail, sending instant messages and playing games. The racial divide in
computer usage is tied to broader problems, including poverty in black and
Latino communities, Lloyd said.
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