TY - JOUR
T1 - One Laptop per Child
T2 - a case study of digital inclusion in rural Chile
AU - Pavez, Isabel
AU - Farías, Catalina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Technology, Pedagogy and Education Association.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Rural areas present challenges to educational programmes like One Laptop per Child, including poor internet signal quality, inadequate teacher training and limited digital skills. This study examines computer access and usage among rural school children (grades 5–8) in three Chilean villages. Through a face-to-face survey with students (N = 219) and in-depth interviews with 12 students and parents (N = 24), results reveal that while the programme successfully provides laptops to students, more is needed to enhance digital skills and educational engagement significantly. Despite increased internet confidence, students often rely on older individuals for technological assistance, indicating limited self-reliance. Moreover, laptops are underutilised in schools and usually serve as communication and entertainment devices rather than personal, educational tools. These findings highlight the importance of integrating targeted digital training with technology distribution and suggest that digital inclusion in rural communities requires a nuanced, context-sensitive approach that considers the specific needs of students, families and educators.
AB - Rural areas present challenges to educational programmes like One Laptop per Child, including poor internet signal quality, inadequate teacher training and limited digital skills. This study examines computer access and usage among rural school children (grades 5–8) in three Chilean villages. Through a face-to-face survey with students (N = 219) and in-depth interviews with 12 students and parents (N = 24), results reveal that while the programme successfully provides laptops to students, more is needed to enhance digital skills and educational engagement significantly. Despite increased internet confidence, students often rely on older individuals for technological assistance, indicating limited self-reliance. Moreover, laptops are underutilised in schools and usually serve as communication and entertainment devices rather than personal, educational tools. These findings highlight the importance of integrating targeted digital training with technology distribution and suggest that digital inclusion in rural communities requires a nuanced, context-sensitive approach that considers the specific needs of students, families and educators.
KW - digital inclusion
KW - digital skills
KW - One Laptop per Child
KW - Rural schools
KW - teachers
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014105704
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/55b7e1bb-64ff-3219-bdd5-2b642d1bb215/
U2 - 10.1080/1475939X.2025.2541958
DO - 10.1080/1475939X.2025.2541958
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105014105704
SN - 1475-939X
JO - Technology, Pedagogy and Education
JF - Technology, Pedagogy and Education
ER -