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Tue, 07 Oct 2008 WiFi helps college students get better grades,

WiFi improves education

Matt Hamblen, Computerworld


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Can WiFi make you smarter? US College students seems to think so. Nearly 75 per cent of the students who took part in a recent poll said WiFi access on their college campus helps them get better grades.

In fact, college students like WiFi so much that 48 per cent said they would give up beer before giving up WiFi, according to the survey, which was conducted by Wakefield Research for the WiFi Alliance. A total of 501 US college students from both large and small schools took the survey in September, the Alliance said.

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The survey appears to confirm what college CIOs in the US and Canada have been saying for the last two years: incoming freshmen seek out schools with WiFi capability. Nearly 60 per cent of the students surveyed said they wouldn't attend a college that doesn't offer free WiFi. And 79 per cent said that without WiFi access, college would be a lot harder.

"WiFi has become a universal expectation among college students," Edgar Figueroa, executive director of the WiFi Alliance, said in a statement. He noted that students respond to the quick access to information that WiFi makes possible, including access to academic information, university schedules and events or the ability to connect with friends via Facebook or MySpace, the Alliance said.

The survey also found that students use WiFi during classes. Although professors at some universities can decide whether to allow WiFi use during class - typing out instant messages can annoy some people - IT managers have reported it is difficult to impose such policies.

More than half of the students in the survey said they have checked MySpace or Facebook or sent or received email while using a laptop in class, and nearly half had sent an instant message to a friend.

The survey also found how and where students reach WiFi. Students log in at coffee shops or restaurants (55 per cent), in parks (47 per cent) or in their cars (24 per cent) in addition to libraries and laboratories. A total of 43 per cent also said they had reached WiFi using a handheld device instead of a laptop or desktop computer. Fully 90 per cent believe WiFi access is as essential to an education as a classroom or a computer.

WiFi has become so prevalent on college campuses that ABI Research said WiFi penetration should reach 99 per cent of all campuses by 2013. Colleges worldwide spent about $137 million in 2007 on WiFi access points and controllers, a figure that's expected to grow to $837 million in 2013, according to ABI. For lower grades, between kindergarten and grade 12, WiFi equipment sales were about $47 million in 2007. That figure is expected to hit $644 million in 2013, ABI said.

The WiFi Alliance survey did not explore how campus CIOs feel about WiFi, although some universities have grappled with ways to keep the service consistent and widely available, as well as secure. At Concordia University in Montreal, for instance, officials in January reported that moving to faster 802.11n Wi-Fi was considered important in keeping students satisfied.

In a recent interview, Jorge Mata, the CIO at the Los Angeles Community College District, which serves 140,000 students in nine colleges, said that students often ask for better WiFi coverage, not faster throughput. "From an educational standpoint, I agree with them, because we know that the longer students are on campus, the greater their chances of success," he said. The colleges in the district all serve commuters.

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Comments received


Nigel said on Tue, 07 Oct 2008

Why are you confusing "better grades" with "smarter"?

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