Henry Jay Becker and Jason L. Ravitz
Journal of
Educational Computing Research, Vol 19 No 1, 1998, p. 1-26
This article examines the distribution of student Internet use across
152 schools in the National School Network (NSN), schools that were among
the first to provide high-speed direct Internet access simultaneously for
many locally networked computers. Apart from identifying the socio-demographic
character of these schools, the article shows the extent to which Internet
use varies by school socio-demographics, and, within school, by prior achievement
level of students. Although membership in the NSN disproportionately includes
schools in high-SES communities, it was found that, among NSN schools, social
class is not related to extent of use. On the other hand, within schools,
Internet use favors high-ability classes, particularly in demographically
heterogeneous schools.
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