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The e-Learning Foundation

Eliminating the 'digital divide'

Established in 2001, the e-Learning Foundation [External Site] is an educational charity that focuses on helping children get access to technology, notably a computer and the internet, to support their learning both at school and at home.

Research shows that children with access to a home computer and the internet do much better at school than those who do not. As children spend only about 15 per cent of their lives in the classroom, it is extremely important that this access to technology is made available to as many as possible.

Research also shows that children from middle-class families are four times as likely to go to university than those from working-class backgrounds. The top three income groups show an 85 per cent home computer ownership level and 75 per cent internet connection, while the bottom three groups are just 23 and 16 per cent respectively. Although the presence of children in a household boosts the computer ownership level, figures show that single-parent families are significantly less likely to have ownership of a computer. These statistics show what has come to be known as the digital divide, which further affects disadvantaged children's educational prospects.

It is the aim of the Foundation to work with both schools and families to ensure that all children have the chance to do well in their education, and not just those with good resources at home. The Foundation helps schools and parents to fund portable computers that are used at school during the day but then taken home for the pupil and their family to use in the evening, at weekends and during the holidays.

In order to fund this extension of access to technology, the Foundation relies largely on donations from parents. The annual report from 2003-2004 suggests the scheme has been working extremely well - for example, secondary schools with an active e-Learning programme own an average of 323 laptops compared to a national average of just 28, and 68 per cent of schools let their pupils take the laptops home, with many others planning to do so in the future. However, the number of computers in schools remains extremely low in the context of whole class learning and the allocation of funding per pupil is not yet adequate to cater for 'wherever, whenever' access.

For just a few pounds a week, you can continue to make this worthwhile project possible. In addition to this, if you make a donation in the form of a Gift Aid Declaration [External Site], for every £1 donated the Foundation can recoup the basic tax rate paid (28p) from the Inland Revenue. More information is available from the e-Learning Foundation's website where you can also make an online donation [External Site]

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