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Home » Up To One Million Students May Still Lack Connectivity During Distance Learning

Up To One Million Students May Still Lack Connectivity During Distance Learning

by CLAYCORD.com
41 comments

By Sydney Johnson – EdSource

Nearly two months into the school year, hundreds of thousands of California students are still without internet access at home needed to connect to teachers and peers during distance learning.

California school districts are required to ensure that students have access to computers and the internet from home if they are participating in online distance learning. But due to global backorders on computing devices and a lack of broadband infrastructure in remote parts of the state, many students are still without the materials they are entitled to this school year.

“Remote learning continues to be out of reach for kids nationwide who lack a reliable internet connection,” Assemblyman Patrick O’Donnell, D-Long Beach, said during a state Education Committee hearing on Wednesday.

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“We need to identify an ongoing (funding) source to support your students.”

At the hearing, California state education leaders, lawmakers and teachers shared progress and stubborn barriers to closing the gap between students who have access to computers and the internet at home and those who do not, known as the digital divide.

It’s unclear exactly how many students are going without the tools they need to connect with their teachers every day during distance learning.

Although the California Department of Education has worked with groups like the Small School Districts’ Association to conduct statewide surveys about internet access during the pandemic, the department does not regularly collect information regarding students’ home internet connections.

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That’s led to different estimates on what’s needed to close the digital divide. California State Board of Education President Linda Darling-Hammond said at least 300,000 students remain unconnected during distance learning — a significant improvement from estimates in June when around 700,000 laptops and 320,000 hotspots were needed.

But state education officials told EdSource that far fewer school districts responded to recent surveys, which may be why the number is lower.

California State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond shared a much higher estimate on Wednesday, saying up to 1 million students could be lacking either computers or internet access needed to participate in distance learning.

What is clear is that while most (97 percent) California households do have broadband at speeds high enough for some video calls, it’s often still not enough when multiple kids and adults are all using the network. And many low-income families in urban areas and many rural regions still are completely unconnected. At least 263,000 households without internet access are located in urban areas and 227,000 unconnected households are in rural areas, according to a report by the Legislative Analyst’s Office.

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Nearly 42 percent of California families said that unreliable internet access was a challenge for them during distance learning, and 29 percent said lack of devices were hindering their learning experience, according to a recent poll by EdSource and FM3 Research.

The current effort to close the digital divide in California has involved a patchwork of solutions. This summer, the state Legislature authorized nearly $5.3 billion in funds for school districts that could be used for purchasing technology for distance learning. Meanwhile, the California Department of Education has secured agreements with technology providers to make up to 1 million iPads and 500,000 other devices available during a global shortage of Chromebooks and Wi-Fi hotspots.

The task force also worked with telecommunications companies to remove some purchasing provisions, such as requiring a customer’s Social Security number, and offer free or low-cost programs to families who qualify for free or reduced-price school meals.

But there have also been major roadblocks to these efforts. Two bills aiming to fund high-speed internet programs in California failed to pass the Legislature this session. And many families report being steered by sales representatives to buy more expensive internet plans and other issues when accessing low-income internet offers.

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“Promises to remedy the situation in two months, or two years, are not reasonable,” said Angela Stegall, president of the Marysville Unified Teachers Association in Yuba County. “I have students who could win the lottery today and still not get internet tomorrow because it does not exist where they live.”

School districts are legally responsible for ensuring their students have the devices and connectivity they need to participate in class.

In California, the Williams Act requires that all students receive equal access to instructional materials, quality teachers and safe schools.

In September, the state’s legal definition of instructional materials was expanded to include computers and internet connectivity since that is the primary way the majority of California students are able to attend school during the pandemic. Now, school districts must assess their materials and make that information public, including access to devices and connectivity for students, and families can submit complaints if they are not given equal access to those materials.

“A student in any California school should be given the same basic equipment, just like every student should be able to walk into a school and get a textbook,” said Michael Romero, Local District South superintendent for Los Angeles Unified.

In districts like Alpaugh Unified, where all students have been given Chromebooks and devices, some students still often have to go to the school parking lot to do school work because they can’t connect to the internet from home, Darling-Hammond said.

“Ultimately federal regulation and investment, along with continued efforts, will be needed to solve the problem,” she said.

Now that funding and devices are available for school districts, state officials are seeking new ideas for how to resolve remaining challenges with access, like slow and spotty service, or building infrastructure where it doesn’t yet exist.

The California Department of Education is planning to ask companies and other organizations for their input through competition for innovative ideas on how to close the digital divide in California beyond hotspots.

“We want to ask California companies and other innovators to think through solutions to a problem that has perplexed us for far too long,” Thurmond said. “We need these tools to make sure our teachers are connected to our kids.”

41 comments


Janon October 16, 2020 - 8:10 AM - 8:10 AM

What if they had in person school be optional, parents can sign a waiver. Those that want to distance learn still can.

Mom October 16, 2020 - 10:22 AM - 10:22 AM

I agree, parents should have a choice. I choose to continue with distance learning for my child.

bdml October 16, 2020 - 11:39 AM - 11:39 AM

That’s great

Patriot October 16, 2020 - 8:17 AM - 8:17 AM

I own a California company.

Here is my input:

Let them go back to school!

CDCs survival rate by age

0-19 99.997%
20-49 99.98%
50-69 99.5%
70 + 94.6%

Thank you for asking

Doh October 16, 2020 - 9:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Those numbers are false. COVID-19 is real. 1,000 deaths per day. Protect the children.

parent October 16, 2020 - 9:20 AM - 9:20 AM

The state is going to ask companies to kick in more money for the schools in order to support their politically based decision to lock down the schools.

These are the same businesses that have been been hurt during these last 8 months by this politically based lockdown … by allowing rioters to burn and destroy their property …

I do not own a business, but if I did in California, I would tell the Department of Education where to go … and it might not be polite.

How about the Department of Education goes to our little dictator and tells him to get off of his political agenda and quit using the children as pawns.

bdml October 16, 2020 - 9:41 AM - 9:41 AM

@ Doh

Where do your numbers come from and why should anybody believe them? Please answer it will be interesting to say the least…

Rollo Tomasi October 16, 2020 - 9:57 AM - 9:57 AM

@Doh:

Please provide the true numbers then. And cite your source. I’ll be here waiting.

Patriot October 16, 2020 - 9:59 AM - 9:59 AM

@Doh Those numbers are real. Stop watching CNN ABC NBC MSNBC AND Fox.

You should go research yourself. You’ll have to spend some time on it because Google is suppressing the information just like Facebook, Twitter and all the other socials.

Kudos to Claycord for being a champion of free speech. Thank you Mayor. You don’t get enough credit for this. Everyone should thank Claycord!

I never said people aren’t dying by the way. But at this point, the cure is worse than the disease. I agreed to a three week quarantine to flatten the curve. I’m done.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/09/25/cdc-data-shows-high-virus-survival-rate-99-plus-for-ages-69-and-younger-94-6-for-older/

Sam October 16, 2020 - 12:07 PM - 12:07 PM

COVID is real. The virus is real. COVID is real. The virus is real. COVID is real. The virus is real. COVID is real. The virus is real.
I have never seen something that is real require so many people say it is.
“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.“- Joseph Goebbels

anon October 16, 2020 - 11:19 PM - 11:19 PM

@Patriot

Yes my friend, this site generally is a rare free speech zone. Bless it.

The Wizard October 16, 2020 - 8:19 AM - 8:19 AM

Open up the schools.

SmileWC October 16, 2020 - 8:19 AM - 8:19 AM

Mid-October and up to 1 million students without access! How will they ever catch up? There’s a solution, but the districts are resistant. Why would New York and many other states reopen their schools -masks required- but not California?

Fred October 16, 2020 - 8:32 AM - 8:32 AM

Because ISP lie to you. How many times have you heard “nationwide 5g”? But, how many of you have 5g? Heck I can barely get 4g and sometimes nothing. Same goes for broadband fiber, even if you can get it, it’s pretty expensive. So yea a million without good connections, welcome to corporate America.

bdml October 16, 2020 - 8:47 AM - 8:47 AM

Open the schools and let parents sign waivers if needed but if a person selling groceries for a living or flipping burgers can swim in this primordial soup called COVID then so can the teachers. Pick another profession if you are scared to return it’s that simple.

anon October 16, 2020 - 11:21 PM - 11:21 PM

Amen brother, the poor wageslaves out there at grocery stores face 10x or more the infection potential every day that teachers would expose themselves to, but without the incredibly generous wages, tenure (screw that!), super long vacations, and a tongue up your bum from every simpleton who thinks the average teacher is on the same level of Jesus Christ.

Denamill October 17, 2020 - 5:29 AM - 5:29 AM

Yess I agree to the fullest! Kids need “real” schooling or the realest that we can offer them

Hayden Barsotti October 16, 2020 - 9:02 AM - 9:02 AM

Solve the problem by opening the schools you dumb a$$.

Captain Bebops October 16, 2020 - 9:14 AM - 9:14 AM

California is supposed to be the home of leadership in Internet technology. But it falls way behind many foreign countries in Internet connectivity and speed. That’s because we’ve allowed a few companies to monopolize the Internet often with substandard service.

Of course Internet connectivity is one thing, the other being that not all students have a computer to work on. This is a crying shame because I know a lot of people send completely usable computers and laptops to recyclers because they don’t know either how to remove the hard drive or how to shred it. Shredding a drive is the process of overwriting a drive enough times that no personal data remains. Unfortunately most people wouldn’t know how to do either of these things.

anon October 16, 2020 - 11:26 PM - 11:26 PM

I mean… I guarantee that 95% of the homes without a computer have a car worth over $10,000 in realistic resale. It’s just an ignorant misallocation of wealth, whether made by the poor or by the rich, not to have a computer.

You can buy a totally decent system for under $100 that will do 1080p video, internet, schoolwork, light gaming, everything a student or average adult would need. I have a 9 year old i7 system which still does literally everything I need of it, and quite well and speedily, outside of modern gaming, for which I have a slightly higher end system.

You are absolutely right about all the decent systems that get junked for no good reason, that is a horrible shame. People should pull their HDD/SSD and donate the rest. PC recyclers should refuse to junk systems like that and instead make a modest profit by reselling them after pulling hard drives.

ZZ October 16, 2020 - 9:22 AM - 9:22 AM

Stop this FARCE and open EVERYTHING!!

MikeyV October 16, 2020 - 9:27 AM - 9:27 AM

If you read far enough you’ll get to the part where they blame Trump.

CA passes the Williams Act and has no way to pay for it.

What’s new?

Barbosa October 16, 2020 - 9:49 AM - 9:49 AM

This is systemic racism I tell you. The privileged white kids in Danville and Lafayette will be just fine. The kids from poor families in Oakland and Pittsburg will fall further behind and marginalized where they’ll may never catch up.

bdml October 16, 2020 - 11:41 AM - 11:41 AM

Maybe just maybe those cities can step up for their citizens instead of blaming systematic racism…just a thought

Cyn October 16, 2020 - 2:38 PM - 2:38 PM

@Barbosa
What about the privileged Black kids and Hispanic kids and Asian kids in Danville and Lafayette? Won’t they be just fine, too?

anon October 16, 2020 - 11:29 PM - 11:29 PM

Point out literally one thing that would be different between the two, outside of disadvantaged kids potentially get additional legs up like free laptops.

Like the other anon said, ask these disadvantaged parents how much they spent on beer and lotto tickets.

Also Asian kids are generally more wealthy than white kids. Indian American kids are FAR wealthier and better educated on average than white kids. In fact, Indian Americans have the highest household income of any race in America. Look it up, it’s a fact. Please tell me about white privilege again?

Sunset Native October 16, 2020 - 9:51 AM - 9:51 AM

OPEN THE SCHOOLS! We have to start somewhere ppl. Open up for Hybrid, mask up and lets get to work. Stop pussyfooting around.

Karma October 16, 2020 - 9:57 AM - 9:57 AM

Aren’t the schools saving thousands of dollars per month on electricity, books, paper, teachers aides, bussing, cafeteria staff, food,
Custodial fees……
Where has the extra money gone?

Ash October 16, 2020 - 10:23 AM - 10:23 AM

then again, with the children in this state being brainwashed into lefties maybe not going to school would help their parents better raise them. hopefully with help and occasional day care. 🙂

God Bless!

bdml October 16, 2020 - 11:42 AM - 11:42 AM

Not a bad point and thank you for the laugh!

anon October 16, 2020 - 11:31 PM - 11:31 PM

Seriously, look at this https://www.foxnews.com/us/philadelphia-public-school-teacher-worries-about-conservative-parents-listening-in-on-virtual-classes

Super left leaning political commissars worried that parents would have ANY INSIGHT into what is being taught to their children.

Sandy October 16, 2020 - 10:24 AM - 10:24 AM

It is astounding to me that people think they should have a say in my workplace. It NOT a political choice. It’s a public health choice! And you don’t get to make other people’s choices for them. We want to be back in schools, but not until it’s safe and we can STAY open. Second wave will be hitting here soon. This is far from over. And kids catch up. Learning has no timeline.

In MDUSD, if you are having connectivity issue, please contact your administrator. They can help with hot spots or devices.

bdml October 16, 2020 - 11:47 AM - 11:47 AM

Public tax money goes to funding your work place and salary so tax payers have no say? Get out of here with that, if you don’t like it pick another profession. You are just parroting your teacher’s union talking point. We need to abolish corrupt unions and focus on the people. The teachers union has been a joke my entire life as a student and parent.

Jessica October 16, 2020 - 12:01 PM - 12:01 PM

@ Sandy
Public schools are a public good available to all and paid for by tax dollars. That gives every person a right to a say in your workplace. You are obviously free to seek other employment outside the public sphere.

If teachers believe open schools are unsafe, I hope they have not left home since March 17th and are continuing a complete quarantine. With grocery/meal delivery, Amazon and video doctor appointments, there is no reason to leave your home.

I assume your complete quarantine for the past 7 months is contributing to your anger because no one else is as deeply committed to this “public health choice” as you. I applaud your complete commitment to public safety.

SmileWC October 16, 2020 - 12:03 PM - 12:03 PM

@Sandy, my kids will catch up. I’m worried about the up to 1,000,000 kids who are not even yet online. How will they catch up? So unfair.

anon October 16, 2020 - 11:33 PM - 11:33 PM

You’re a baby, a whiner, if I can be honest. Wage slaves at Walmart and Safeway and similar jobs face 10x to 100x the viral exposure you do, yet they make 1/3 or 1/5 of the wages or less. They are doing their part, providing FOOD, MEDICINE, and other VITAL GOODS to people in a time of global crisis. All you teachers do is complain and ask for more money. It’s pathetic and you should all be ashamed; it’s all about the money and the majority of teachers do not seemingly truly care about the quality of the education they are providing.

chuckie the troll October 16, 2020 - 11:12 AM - 11:12 AM

The reason why the Corona-Mania Closure of our schools is so popular with Liberals is that is harms the poor, minorities and immigrants, which in turn benefits THEIR children. Not much different from placing abortion clinics in predominantly black/brown neighborhoods…it isn’t an accident.

The Fearless Spectator October 16, 2020 - 6:18 PM - 6:18 PM

Our Governor is requesting that Caucasian students participate in distance learning that is further away than the distance learning of minority students. He is requesting that it be measured in internet speed. It’s a Gavin thing.

Sandy October 16, 2020 - 2:35 PM - 2:35 PM

@Jessica, @bdml – our taxes pay for a lot but you don’t get a say in how to run any of them. Did you decide for every program in the state funded by taxes? Of course not. You don’t get a say here either. Both of you are quite rude for the personal attacks.

@SmileWC – I agree. That is exactly why I posted how to get help in the MDUSD. We need to take care of all kids, not pick and choose based on money.

Cyn October 16, 2020 - 3:15 PM - 3:15 PM

@Sandy
You wrote that taxpayers don’t get a say in your workplace. Did it occur to you that a school is a place where kids work, therefore making it their workplace also? Said kids have tax-paying parents and you are way out of line telling them that they don’t have a say in their children’s education. I no longer have a dog in this fight, but as a former MDUSD parent, you really pissed me off.

Sam October 16, 2020 - 5:38 PM - 5:38 PM

@Cyn
Of course Sandy didn’t think of the children. If Sandy doesn’t think taxpayers have a say in anything, she’s not alone. Kids to them are empty vessels waiting for programming. The arrogance of some teachers is astounding. They literally hang out at school all day shoving marxist gobbly gook on innocent children. Abusing kids who don’t buy into their bs. Not held accountable for kids actually learning. Then take the whole summer off.


Comments are closed.

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