The Library’s Educational Role in Bridging the Digital Divide
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.29173/pathfinder85Keywords:
digital divide, digital literacy, digital inclusion, digital exclusion, universal access, public libraries, school libraries, academic librariesAbstract
Society has steadily grown more technology-reliant and continues to shift toward digital landscapes for education, business, government, and personal tasks. Alongside these trends there increases a chasm between various privileged and disadvantaged social groups who do or do not have access and knowledge to participate in a digital society. School, public, and academic libraries have an integral role to play in providing both education and access tools to communities to enhance people’s ability to participate in digital activities. By collaborating with each other to decrease the digital divide(s), libraries and social institutions can help to create digitally ethical and responsible participants. This paper explores and compiles existing literature and initiatives regarding the challenges and solutions for libraries aiming to bridge the digital divide(s), what digital literacy and digital citizenship are, and emphasizes the role of educating communities as equally important as providing access to technology.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Jessica Jutras
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Authors retain all copyright for their work published by Pathfinder. The specific copyright information for each work is included with the work itself. Pathfinder retains the right of first publication. Use and reproduction rights of any articles or abstracts on the Pathfinder website are granted for individual, non-commercial, and educational purposes only, and for electronic materials if properly cited. Otherwise, permission must be obtained from Pathfinder or the authors.
Our full copyright terms can be found in Section 4 of our Author's Agreement.
All other materials are covered by a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0).