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Digital equity: Diversity, inclusion and access for incarcerated students in a digital age

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-30, 17:01 authored by Helen Farley, Julie Willems
ELearning has been touted as the way in which universities can enable participation by large numbers of students from non-traditional cohorts. There is no doubt that the flexibility of access that eLearning allows makes study accessible for a number of cohorts, including those engaged in full-time work or caring duties. However, cohorts such as incarcerated students and other students without Internet access, are sitting on the wrong side of the digital divide and are increasingly marginalised by the very technology anticipated to overcome their exclusion from study. This paper examines the fundamental issues of equity involved with eLearning, and particularly for incarcerated students. The very issue of access to the Internet is fraught with rates of access varying widely between different sectors of society. This discussion prompts higher education providers to think beyond business-as-usual when speaking of increasing participation in higher education.

History

Start page

68

End page

72

Total pages

5

Outlet

Proceedings of the 34th International Conference on Innovation, Practice and Research in the Use of Educational Technologies in Tertiary Education (ASCILITE 2017)

Editors

H. Partridge, K. Davis, J. Thomas

Name of conference

ASCILITE 2017: Me, Us, IT!

Publisher

ASCILITE // University of Southern Queensland

Place published

Australia

Start date

2017-12-04

End date

2017-12-06

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence

Former Identifier

2006080206

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-12-04

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