John Carroll’s websites—at least in the S.T.E.M. area—function
as a core component of the university’s education and information relaying
systems. Where do we schedule our classes? Where do we submit our assignments?
Where do we even find out what our assignments are and what the calendar looks
like? The list goes on and on…
At least in my own experience, this is not something new
or unique to my time at JCU. Over the course of my life, I have seen how more
and more is migrating from the local shop or catalog to the online sites. My
family hardly ever uses a phone book anymore but rather just google search for
the number we need, which would have been unthinkable just a few years ago. 99%
of our bills are paid via online methods, as well as our banking. We get our directions
via the internet. We do not have SMS
texting, so we rely on internet-based methods such as email and Facebook/Skype/Google
and the like messenger programs for the bulk of our written communications. We
buy an increasing percentage of our equipment and other goods via online
stores.
I haven’t used physical books significantly for
research projects since 9th grade. Why? Simply because they are more
time consuming when it comes to even finding the information I am looking for
and they are always slightly out of date. You cannot publish and distribute a full
size, physical book overnight, yet it is possible, in a way, via the internet. Without
the internet, I would not have had the opportunity to pick up a ridiculous amount
of information outside of the normal school system via podcasts and websites
over the course of late middle and all of high school. What took me fifteen minutes
to learn via the audio recordings delivered by the internet would take a good twenty
minutes to read in physical form—without any verbal emphasis context--as well
as extra time to even find the physical information in the first place (encyclopedia
indexing …ugh, don’t get me started…).
I
would not have found out about and decided to go to John Carroll without information
I found via online sources. My dad has been affected by a string of lay-offs
since 2009ish, and each time has found work again via the internet.
So,
what was the point of that rant? As an illustration as to what the better off
side of the “digital divide” looks like, of which we take for granted. Too many
lack access to these kinds of resources. In general, the sources that I cite at
the end of this post verified the idea that internet access and ability to move
up the socioeconomic ladder go hand in hand. They did also point out the other
issues that my group is not capable/planning to directly deal with, namely
decent internet access transmission rates and providing education and training
on how to use the internet for new users. We plan to focus on providing devices
that can access the internet, with the hope being to bank on the assumption that
local Wi-Fi hotspots are able to provide a serviceable level internet access,
but users need their own devices. We could try to come up with some way to
provide education on how to use the devices, but we are 100% incapable of doing
the work of an ISP by ourselves.
(sources are given without direct quotes, the literature is related to the issue fairly well but not 100%)
Bibliography
Baird,
Jane E., Robert C. Zelin II, and Queen Esther Booker. "Is There A
"Digital Divide" In The Provision Of E-Government Services At The
County Level In The United States?."Journal Of Legal, Ethical &
Regulatory Issues 15.1 (2012): 93-104. Business Source
Complete. Web. 3 Nov. 2014.
Howard,
Philip N., Laura Busch, and Penelope Sheets. "Comparing Digital Divides:
Internet Access And Social Inequality In Canada And The United States." Canadian
Journal Of Communication 35.1 (2010): 109-128. Communication
& Mass Media Complete. Web. 3 Nov. 2014.
Wagner,
Todd H., et al. "Free Internet Access, the Digital Divide, and Health
Information." Medical Care 2005: 415. JSTOR
Journals. Web. 3 Nov. 2014.
WARF,
BARNEY. "Contemporary Digital Divides In The United States." Tijdschrift
Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie (Journal Of Economic & Social
Geography) 104.1 (2013): 1-17. Academic Search Complete.
Web. 3 Nov. 2014.
YOUNG,
JEFFREY R. "Bandwidth Divide' Could Bar Some People From Online
Learning." Chronicle Of Higher Education 59.26 (2013):
A12. Academic Search Complete. Web. 3 Nov. 2014.
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