Digital equity in Australian Higher Education: How prisoners are missing out

Julie Willems, Helen Farley, Jane Garner

Research output: Book chapter/Published conference paperConference paperpeer-review

Abstract

With the growth in the use of the internet and accompanying digital technologies as part of business as usual for teaching and learning in higher education, there are more opportunities for participation. The rhetoric is that these technologies are able to increase participation by non-traditional cohorts. However, the reality remains that this reliance on connectivity and technology is also preventing many others from participating in higher education. For example, the delivery of course materials and activities exclusively through the internet is problematic, when the distribution of that access is not democratic in itself. Digital equity is a significant human rights issue that needs to be addressed. This paper opens a dialogue about digital equity in teaching and learning in higher education, through the lens of the incarcerated student. While universities move away from delivering printed materials for their remote learners, in every state and territory of Australia, prisoners are prohibited from directly accessing the internet, further disadvantaging this sector of the population. Highlighting this continuing digital divide is crucial to the continuing equitable development of our sector, and for the scholarship of teaching and learning; it is also an issue of humanity. Any serious attempt to encourage disadvantaged cohorts to participate in higher education must include strategies to deal with the continuing marginalisation of students. In the case of incarcerated students, some policy decisions regarding access to the digital environment and its associated hardware may need to be reviewed by correctional jurisdictions. Only in this way will the rhetoric match the reality for the populations who are among our most disadvantaged
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationResearch and Development in Higher Education
Subtitle of host publication(Re)Valuing Higher Education
EditorsDale Wache, Don Houston
Place of PublicationHammondville, NSW
PublisherHigher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia, Inc
Pages247-256
Number of pages10
ISBN (Electronic)9780908557967
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Event41st annual conference of the Higher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia : HERDSA 2018 - Adelaide Convention Centre, Adelaide, Australia
Duration: 02 Jul 201805 Jul 2018
https://web.archive.org/web/20180313105557/http://herdsa2018.aomevents.com.au/ (Conference website)

Publication series

NameResearch and Development in Higher Education
PublisherHigher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia, Inc
Volume41
ISSN (Electronic)1441-001X

Conference

Conference41st annual conference of the Higher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia
Abbreviated title(Re)Valuing Higher Education
Country/TerritoryAustralia
CityAdelaide
Period02/07/1805/07/18
OtherThe theme for the conference is (Re)Valuing Higher Education. Higher education has undergone dramatic change in the last decade with an international agenda to open universities to a broader range of individuals while requiring researchers to focus on priorities set by government.
The sector is forced to continue to grapple with restrained budgets, increased student numbers, greater student diversity and government agendas requiring preparation of students for work and lifelong learning. It also faces an increasingly under resourced and corporatized and complex research environment.
Within this context we wish to consider what the value of higher education has become. By (Re)Valuing Higher Education we are revisiting the purpose and scope of what being a ‘university’ means as well as considering what differentiates ‘higher’ learning from other forms of post-secondary education.
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