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How to reach the many offline students

Educators cannot assume that all young people are old hands online, research shows

Published on
August 15, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Source: Getty

Digital native: but some of her classmates may not be fluent with technology, especially those from poor backgrounds

Academics and university administrators may be struggling to keep up with social media, but research shows that the digital divide is not just generational. It is racial, ethnic and socio-economic, and there are even differences in the way that men and women communicate online.

That imbalance could affect efforts to recruit, retain and teach under-represented students, according to the US academic who led the work.

鈥淭here鈥檚 an assumption that all students are equally great with technology,鈥 said Rey Junco, an associate professor at Purdue University and a faculty associate at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University.

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But students from low-income households, or those whose parents did not go to college, are surprisingly less sophisticated in their use of social media.

People whose friends use social media to check up on them, for example, are less likely to drop out. Yet men are less likely than women to do this, just as black students are less likely to do so than whites, Professor Junco has found.

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Students from low-income backgrounds are less likely to engage in any online communication 鈥 a factor that helps people to feel more connected to a group and one that has been shown by other research to lower dropout rates. Such students are also less likely to feel comfortable interacting with academics who use social media.

Not so fast on the Twitter

This is something that teaching staff on campus seldom realise, Professor Junco said. 鈥淚f we keep in mind that not all students have the same level of skill and facility with new technologies, then we behave in ways as educators that help level the playing field,鈥 he said.

鈥淥ne way this could play out is, if a student says to a professor, 鈥極h, I聽don鈥檛 know how to do that鈥, the professor might scoff and be irritated and say, 鈥榃hat do you mean? You know this more than I聽do.鈥 So if I聽am teaching a class and I聽say, 鈥極K, we鈥檙e going to use Twitter鈥, it鈥檚 important for me to also be sure that all my students know what Twitter聽is.鈥

This digital inequality, as Professor Junco calls it, can affect students as early as the admissions process, he said.

A survey of US admissions officers by Kaplan, the entrance-examination preparation company, found that more than a quarter visit applicants鈥 Facebook pages and search for other references to them online, and that in more than a third of cases something pops up that hurts an applicant鈥檚 chances.

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鈥淭hey鈥檙e evaluating people on data they don鈥檛 have for everybody and [that] can be discriminatory,鈥 Professor Junco said.

Students who come from higher socio-economic levels and whose parents have gone to college 鈥渁re going to be more savvy and able to hide their profiles from people鈥, he said. 鈥淭hey have the internet skills to set privacy settings and be aware of these things.鈥

Meanwhile, Professor Junco said, the people who are less likely to safeguard their profiles are from lower socio-economic backgrounds.

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At university, different types of students also tend to interact online with other people like them, just as students of different races and ethnic backgrounds segregate themselves in real life.

University students 鈥渦sually don鈥檛 use social media to connect with strangers鈥, Professor Junco said. 鈥淔or the most part they鈥檙e interacting with people they already know.鈥

But that changes over time, he added, making social media useful tools to link students with their institutions, which helps to improve academic success rates.

鈥淭hey do meet new people that way. It鈥檚 a good way to check out new friends, new people in class. They engage in information-seeking online to learn about them, to see, 鈥楬ey, is this someone I聽want to hang out with?鈥欌娾

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