Menu Secondary

Aidwa
AIDWA
  • About AIDWA
  • Events
  • What we do
  • Inspiring Stories
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • NewsLetters
  • Press Releases
search
menu
  • About Aidwa
  • Events
  • Inspiring Stories
  • Magazines
  • Resources
  • Reports
  • Publications
  • Posters
  • What We Do
  • Food and Health
  • Women and Work
  • Gender Violence
  • Gender Discrimination
  • Communalism
  • Legal Intervention
  • Media Portrayal
About us
Contact us
Follow us Facebook - Newsclick Twitter - Newsclick RSS - Newsclick
close menu

What Happened to Access to Digital Education during Lockdown?

Indian Researcher
31 Aug 2021
Access to smartphones during lockdown

[This is an extract from a report entitled ‘A Pandemic that Ended Education for Many: A Report by the Indian Researcher’ Published by the Student Federation of India’s Indian Researcher, on 10 August 2021, pp. 24-26.]

  • More than 38 per cent of School-going children had no access to smart-phones in rural India. This divide is further pronounced by the type of school management. A little more than 43 per cent of students from public schools had no access to smart-phones during the lockdown period of 2020 (Pratham, Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2020, Wave I, 2021).

Access to smartphones

  • We also observe a worrisome response, when the parents of the students from rural sections were asked about lack of access to educational material during the reference week of the ASER First Wave Survey. A Parent could report more than a single reason for not receiving learning material from school, therefore the row totals can add up to more than 100 per cent here. Almost one in four parents reported not having access to smart phone in rural India and one in ten parents reported no internet access (ASER 2020, Wave I).

Access to educational material

Widening the Socio-Economic Divide in School Education: Broader Impacts of Digital Divide in Rural India

  • If we assume a proxy of education level of parents for the socio-economic position of the households, then the current socio-economic divide of the ‘digital education’ becomes much more prominent. More than 45 per cent of students with low parental education (i.e. less than primary level education for parents) gets no help in learning at home. (ASER Wave-I, 2021). This improves with levels of parental education, and most importantly, 45 per cent of the students whose parents are under ‘High’ category of education, receive help from their mother.

Students receiving help from home

  • Micro-level village based studies also conform to the same pattern. Access to alternative forms of classes and assistance from parents or any other family members are closely linked to the socio-economic status of the household in rural India. A Telephonic interview based study conducted by the Foundation for Agrarian Studies, report, “…All students in India, and perhaps in many parts of the world, have suffered during the lockdown, but the worst-hit were those who did not have any place to study other than school itself.” 
COVID-19
Coronavirus
Pandemic
Education

More Stories

  • A plan for constructing an Aqua food processing factory in Thundurru village was underway
    A plan for constructing an Aqua food processing factory in Thundurru village was underway.
    17 Jul 2017
    Areti Sathyavathi, age 55, belongs to Thundurru village. Her husband is a cancer patient. In spite of her difficulties, she has been agitating along with the villagers for a pollution-free village…
  • Life and Work of Savitribai Phule
    Life and Work of Savitribai Phule
    17 Jul 2017
              The life of Savitribai, wife of Jotirao (or Jotiba, as he is fondly known in Marathi) Phule is a tale of great sacrifice and courage. Born on 3 January 1831 in a relatively well to do…
  • Godavari Parulekar
    Godavari Parulekar
    25 Mar 2017
    Born on August 14, 1907, Godavari Parulekar was a freedom fighter, a militant leader of the Warli Adivasi Revolt, a founder of the Maharashtra Rajya Kisan Sabha, the only woman president of the All…
  • Brinda Karat
    When Rape Becomes A Weapon Against Tribal Women
    12 Jan 2017
    The National Human Rights Commission is to be congratulated for taking the first step, even though much delayed, to bring justice to tribal women in the Bastar region of Chattisgarh. Its interim…
  • Combating Communalism
    Combating Communalism
    14 Dec 2016
    From its very inception in 1981, AIDWA has had a very clear understanding about Communalism. It has recognized communalism as a way of not only dividing women and the working people but also as…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us