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Autor principal: Hendrix, Elizabeth
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2005
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Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ844701
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author Hendrix, Elizabeth
author_facet Hendrix, Elizabeth
Hendrix, Elizabeth
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Permanent Injustice: Rawls' Theory of Justice and the Digital Divide Hendrix, Elizabeth Access to Computers Educational Technology Internet Computers Computer Uses in Education Disadvantaged Equal Education Social Justice Social Theories Educational Equity (Finance) Socioeconomic Influences Social Class Democracy Social Influences At Risk Students There are more than 700 million current Internet users, but the world population is approximately 6 billion (Trend 2001), indicating that computer technology is used by less than one-eighth of the population. Computers are becoming common tools in schools, often viewed as a democratic panacea despite the costs involved and despite the fact that the majority does not have access to computers and/or the Internet; this creates a digital divide for students, in which some are "more equal" than others. Educators, thinking they have solved the digital divide issue, create a placebo effect because most do not consider students' issues of transportation to the library, lack of funds for a home computer, or the time it takes to navigate an available public computer and Internet connection. In this paper, the author argues that Rawls' theory of justice does not work in practice with regard to technology, or as a way to solve the digital divide and the inequalities in school funding. She argues that another ethical theory should guide technological funding and policies in schools, embracing theories by Levinas, Noddings, Davis, Freire, Nkrumah, and Buber, in order to open scholarly discussion on the issues of injustice and technological funding inequities.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
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institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle Permanent Injustice: Rawls' Theory of Justice and the Digital Divide
Hendrix, Elizabeth
Access to Computers
Educational Technology
Internet
Computers
Computer Uses in Education
Disadvantaged
Equal Education
Social Justice
Social Theories
Educational Equity (Finance)
Socioeconomic Influences
Social Class
Democracy
Social Influences
At Risk Students
Permanent Injustice: Rawls' Theory of Justice and the Digital Divide Hendrix, Elizabeth Access to Computers Educational Technology Internet Computers Computer Uses in Education Disadvantaged Equal Education Social Justice Social Theories Educational Equity (Finance) Socioeconomic Influences Social Class Democracy Social Influences At Risk Students There are more than 700 million current Internet users, but the world population is approximately 6 billion (Trend 2001), indicating that computer technology is used by less than one-eighth of the population. Computers are becoming common tools in schools, often viewed as a democratic panacea despite the costs involved and despite the fact that the majority does not have access to computers and/or the Internet; this creates a digital divide for students, in which some are "more equal" than others. Educators, thinking they have solved the digital divide issue, create a placebo effect because most do not consider students' issues of transportation to the library, lack of funds for a home computer, or the time it takes to navigate an available public computer and Internet connection. In this paper, the author argues that Rawls' theory of justice does not work in practice with regard to technology, or as a way to solve the digital divide and the inequalities in school funding. She argues that another ethical theory should guide technological funding and policies in schools, embracing theories by Levinas, Noddings, Davis, Freire, Nkrumah, and Buber, in order to open scholarly discussion on the issues of injustice and technological funding inequities.
title Permanent Injustice: Rawls' Theory of Justice and the Digital Divide
topic Access to Computers
Educational Technology
Internet
Computers
Computer Uses in Education
Disadvantaged
Equal Education
Social Justice
Social Theories
Educational Equity (Finance)
Socioeconomic Influences
Social Class
Democracy
Social Influences
At Risk Students
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ844701