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Today's students more wired than ever

Studies: 9 in 10 computer-savvy, most navigating Web

Studies: 9 in 10 computer-savvy, most navigating Web

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Computing and Information Technology

WASHINGTON (AP) -- If kids today seem more wired than ever, it's because they are.

About 90 percent of people ages 5 to 17 use computers and 59 percent of them use the Internet -- rates that are, in both cases, higher than those of adults.

Even kindergartners are becoming more plugged in: One out of four 5-year-olds uses the Internet.

The figures come from a new Education Department analysis of computer and Internet use by children and adolescents in 2001. A second report from the agency, based on 2002 data, shows 99 percent of public schools have Internet access, up from 35 percent eight years ago.

"Children are often the first adopters of a lot of technology," said John Bailey, who oversees educational technology for the department. "They grow up with it. They don't have to adapt to it. ... Students, by and large, are dominating the Internet population."

By the time they're 10 years old, 60 percent of children use the Internet. That number grows to almost 80 percent for kids who are 16.

And, like adults, young people are going online for a range of reasons, the research shows. Almost three in four use the Internet for help with school assignments, while more than half use it for writing e-mail, sending instant messages to friends or playing games.

Girls, who not long ago used computers and the Internet at lower rates than boys, have essentially eliminated that difference, the research says. But there are other notable gaps.

Almost two-thirds of young white people use the Internet, but less than half of black people ages 5 to 17 do, and slightly more than a third of Hispanic young people log on. Part of the reason is access -- 80 percent of black students use computers at school, for example, but only 41 percent do so at home, according to the 2001 report.

"Education is the way we make sure to build technology into the experience for all children," said Rosemarie Young, principal of Watson Lane Elementary in Louisville, Kentucky. "It's like school has been able to become the common denominator."

Online and at school

From rural areas to the suburbs to cities, almost every public school is wired for the Internet and schools now have one computer with Internet access for every five students, the research shows. As a result, more children and teens use computers at school than at home.

However, young people are more likely to access the Internet at home than at school -- an indication, Bailey said, that many teachers are not yet comfortable enough with the online tool to incorporate it into class. That must be a target area for improvement, he said.

Schools are using the Internet to keep parents updated about their kids' performance and to improve student access to a range of textbooks, advanced courses and test preparations. Almost all schools report that they use measures to block Internet access to inappropriate Web sites.

At Young's school, 5-year-olds spend 15 minutes a day on the computer, listening to stories and the pronunciations of letters. They also practice computer skills by coloring the electronic way -- selecting and clicking on the colors they want to fill in shapes.

The report on computer and Internet use by children and adolescents was based on September 2001 interviews conducted with members of about 56,000 households. The report about Internet access in public schools was based on a fall 2002 survey to a representative sample of schools in the 50 states and the District of Columbia.

The release of the reports came Wednesday -- the same day that the nonprofit NetDay and the communications company BellSouth invited tens of thousands of students to comment on how to improve technology in their schools. Ideas gathered online will be given to the Education Department with the goal of influencing the nation's next educational technology plan.



Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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