Abstract - The Information Society 15(1)

Home Computers and School Performance

Paul Attewell and Juan Battle

This paper assesses the effects of home computers on school performance, and examines inequalities in educational payoff among those children who have home computers.

We find that having a home computer is associated with higher test scores in mathematics and reading, even after controlling for family income, and for cultural and social capital. However, children from high socio-economic status homes achieve larger educational gains from home computers than lower SES children. Boys' performance advantage is larger than girls'. Ethnic minorities gain far less of a performance boost than whites. Home computing may generate another "Sesame Street Effect" whereby an innovation which held great promise for poorer children to catch up educationally with more affluent children, in practice is increasing the educational gap between affluent and poor, between boys and girls, between ethnic minorities and whites, even among those with access to the technology.

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