69传媒 can play a role in improving parents鈥 digital know-how so they can help their children work through online class assignments at home. But they can鈥檛 do it alone, concludes a released Jan. 14 by the State Educational Technology Directors Association.
Most parents wish they had greater digital savvy and stronger technological skills so that they could help their children with online class assignments, and in navigating the complex worlds of social media and misinformation online, the report notes.
In fact, 83 percent of families want their schools to provide more information on how to use digital tools to support their children鈥檚 learning, according to a survey by Project Tomorrow, a nonprofit organization focused on digital equity, that was cited in SETDA鈥檚 report.
A little more than half of parents鈥51 percent鈥攕aid they felt 鈥渧ery comfortable鈥 managing their children鈥檚 passwords and access to online learning sites. Half said the same of using digital textbooks and curriculum, the Project Tomorrow survey found.
69传媒 increasingly find themselves having to puzzle through challenges brought on by technology that affects students鈥 lives outside of school, said Ji Soo Song, the director of projects and initiatives at SETDA.
鈥淒istricts are facing a lot of demands when it comes to policy and practice and guidance with emerging issues like the cellphone ban [questions], digital citizenship, media literacy, and AI,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e facing those demands, but they don鈥檛 have the internal capacity to be able to handle them.鈥
Song added: 鈥69传媒, as stretched as they are, can鈥檛 just be the sole institution that teaches these skills. There needs to be a communitywide approach.鈥
That sentiment is echoed in the report, which recommends that 鈥渂uilding K鈥12 digital skills must be a multi-sector, whole-ecosystem commitment so that the work is sustainable and not the sole responsibility of school systems.鈥
It suggests that family engagement be a key part of any community鈥檚 digital equity strategy and that parents be given the resources they need to support their children鈥檚 digital skill development at home.
Some states鈥攊ncluding Delaware, Massachusetts, and New Mexico鈥攁re working to boost the digital citizenship skills of both parents and students by requiring schools to teach specific skills alongside academics to students.
Helping the parents who struggle the most with technology
Low-income parents, those with lower education levels, and those whose first language is not English are more likely to struggle in helping children use technology to complete school assignments at home, according to research conducted, in part, by Vikki Katz, a professor in the school of communication studies at Chapman University in Irvine, Calif.
That exacerbates existing inequities, Katz said.
But the gap in digital expertise between such families and those from more advantaged backgrounds began to close during the pandemic, as more parents were called on to help children navigate digital learning, her research found.
Still, Katz worries that 鈥渂ecause we really haven鈥檛 capitalized on [that progress] where we could have absolutely, that those gaps are reopening again,鈥 she said.