Released by the U.S. Department of Education for the first time since 2016, the new National Educational Technology Plan focuses on the digital access divide, digital use divide, and digital design divide.
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The U.S. Department of Education has released a new national education technology plan for the first time since 2016. Unlike past plans that have “largely served as surveys of the state of the field,” the 2024 National Educational Technology Plan (NETP) “frames three key divides limiting the transformational potential of educational technology to support teaching and learning,” says a U.S. Department of Education press release. These are the digital use divide, the digital design divide and the digital access divide.
"The office of Ed Tech, working with other organizations, brought together stakeholders from K16 to put together a plan that focuses on closing the digital divide," says Greg Bagby, Coordinator of Instructional Technology at Hamilton County Department of Education in Tennessee, who participated in creating the plan. "There are examples from all 50 states on the work that’s going on."
The full 113-page National Education Technology Plan is worth reading in its entirety for those whose work involves edtech or education equity. In the meantime, here are some initial takeaways.
The first of the three divides examined in the 2024 National Educational Technology Plan is the digital use divide. As many educators already know, this is not about access to technology but rather about access to better use of technology.
According to the plan, the digital use divide refers to “Inequitable implementation of instructional tasks supported by technology.” On one hand there “are students who are asked to actively use technology in their learning to analyze, build, produce, and create using digital tools,” meanwhile students at the other end of the divide encounter “instructional tasks where they are asked to use technology for passive assignment completion.”
To overcome this divide, the NETP offers the following tips, the highlights of which focus on developing the profile of a technology-using learner (including determining basic competencies and needs), designing detailed edtech evaluation and adoption plans, forging partnerships with stakeholders, and providing edtech professional development.
The plan notes that the Digital Design Divide “is between and within those systems that provide every educator the time and support they need to build their capacities to design learning experiences with digital tools, and those that do not.”
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Overcoming this divide requires helping educators effectively harness the dizzying amount of technology tools available to them. “In systems where the average teacher can access more than 2,000 digital tools in a given moment, training on a tool’s basic functionality is insufficient,” the plan notes. “Closing the design divide moves teachers beyond the formulaic use of digital tools and allows them to actively design learning experiences for all students within a complex ecosystem of resources.”
Here are the eight ways in which the plan advises school leaders to overcome this divide. The key focus here is on creating a edtech-friendly culture for students and educators that provides plenty of professional support for both.
The digital access divide is arguably the most important because without access to technology, students are clearly at a disadvantage.
Accordingly, the National Education Plan devotes the most space to exploring this divide and offering tips for overcoming it. As in other sections, the advice and examples provided are distilled down to a list of suggestions, some of which extend beyond the school setting. The key takeaways here revolve around being very intentional in edtech planning, purchase, use, and adoption, and making sure to always consider aspects such as inclusion, accessibility, and digital literacy.
Erik Ofgang is a Tech & Learning contributor. A journalist, author and educator, his work has appeared in The New York Times, the Washington Post, the Smithsonian, The Atlantic, and Associated Press. He currently teaches at Western Connecticut State University’s MFA program. While a staff writer at Connecticut Magazine he won a Society of Professional Journalism Award for his education reporting. He is interested in how humans learn and how technology can make that more effective.