Digital Divide and Educational Inequality in Developing Countries
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https://doi.org/10.71126/nijms.v2i5.131सार
The digital divide which refers to the unfair distribution of digital technology access and internet connectivity and digital literacy skills among different groups of people has become the major structural factor that creates educational inequality in the twenty-first century. In developing countries 91 percent of children from low-income families face learning poverty according to the World Bank (2023) which creates a learning gap between students who have digital access and those who do not. This research paper investigates multiple aspects of the digital divide that exists in developing countries educational systems by studying its fundamental causes and its effects on educational results which intersect with existing gender and geographical and income-based disparities. The paper presents a study that demonstrates through secondary data analysis from World Bank ITU UNESCO and UNICEF distribution of data from 2021 to 2023 and 30 peer-reviewed studies about digital divide issues across Sub-Saharan Africa South Asia Southeast Asia and Latin America that digital divide exists as a permanent element of global educational inequality which needs government policies to establish infrastructure and develop teaching methods and create educational materials and manage educational systems.
Keywords: digital divide, educational inequality, developing countries, learning poverty, digital literacy, ICT in education, rural education, UNESCO, gender gap, e-learning.
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