Raegan Byrd tries to complete her school homework every night. But the high school student in Hartford, Connecticut, uses her mobile phone because she does not have a computer or internet at home.
Smartphones can connect to the internet. But they have small screens. Byrd has a hard time switching between websites, and messages sent from friends. She says she tries to write school papers on her phone. But when there are internet connectivity problems, she writes them by hand, she told the Associated Press.
The AP studied information from the U.S. census and found that nearly 3 million students in the United States do not have internet at home. That is about 17 percent of all U.S. students. Eighteen percent of students do not have home access to broadband internet.
Nearly all American students have access to computers and the internet in their schools. But at home, the cost of internet service, and sometimes the lack of availability, create problems in rural areas, and even cities. Some call the problem, "the homework gap."
How the homework gap hurts students
Until a few years ago, Raegan's school gave every student a laptop equipped with an internet hot spot—providing them with internet. But the money for the program ran out.
School districts, local governments in Connecticut and others have tried to help. Districts put wireless internet on buses and created hotspots. Many communities made lists of restaurants and other businesses with Wi-Fi places where children are welcome to come and do their homework.
Some students study in the parking lots of schools, libraries or restaurants — wherever they can find a signal.
Another option for communities is to provide access through unused television frequencies. The Hartford Public Library plans to try that next year.
The National Center for Education Statistics suggests that students with home internet get better scores in reading, math and science than ones who do not. The homework gap can hurt the poor and minority students, creating barriers to their education.
Janice Flemming-Butler is an activist who has researched barriers to internet access in Hartford. She said it is a big injustice for minority students not to have equal access to the internet.
Susan Johnston is an English teacher in Harford. She said using paper and chalkboards is not a good idea. She thinks students really need to learn to use technology "because it's not going away."
The U.S. Department of Education gathered statistics in 2017 and released its findings in May. It found that the number of households without internet has been getting smaller, but 14 percent of homes in city areas and 18 percent of homes in rural areas still lack internet connections. About 33 percent of homes with school-age children that do not have internet say money is the reason.
A commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission, Jessica Rosenworcel, called the homework gap "the cruelest part of the digital divide."
In rural northern Mississippi, home internet is not available for some whether they can pay for it or not.
Sharon Stidham takes her four boys to the school library at East Webster High School. Her husband works there, so they can use the internet for schoolwork. A cellphone tower can be seen through the trees from their home, but the internet signal does not reach their house.
A third of the 294 households in Maben, Mississippi, have no computer and close to half have no internet.
I'm Bryan Lynn.
And I'm Anne Ball.
Michal Melia, Jeff Amy and Larry Fenn wrote this story for the Associated Press. Anne Ball adapted it for Learning English.
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