posted on 2008-04-14, 11:43authored byHelen Greenwood, Louise Cooke
The paper presents the findings of research into the extent and impact of restricted access to
ICT based communications for specific groups of staff in UK further and higher education
organisations. Educational institutions disseminate key corporate information internally via
email, intranets and Virtual Learning Environments. However, the extent to which access to
electronic communications is available to all personnel within such institutions in the UK has
not previously been established. The research arose from a concern that a significant
proportion of staff were being routinely excluded from access, thus perpetuating and
extending existing inequalities among personnel and creating a digital divide between the
‘information rich’ and the ‘information poor’. A questionnaire survey was used to quantify
the extent of restrictions on staff access across the sector, whilst case study research was used
to conduct a qualitative analysis of its impact on individuals and institutions. The findings
indicate that lack of hardware and network infrastructure pose less of a barrier to access than
does lack of ICT skills, lack of motivation either to use computers or to gain ICT skills, and
line manager resistance to staff using computers or accessing ICT training in work time. Job
function was the factor most associated with lack of access, with cleaning, catering and
estates staff least likely to have access. However, there were also examples identified of
effective practice in extending the range of personnel with access and ensuring inclusive
communication with all personnel. These insights into good practice should be transferable to
a wide range of workplace contexts.
History
School
Science
Department
Information Science
Citation
GREENWOOD, H.R. and COOKE, L., 2008. ICT in the workplace: access for all or digital divide? IN: Providing Access to Information for Everyone : BOBCATSSS 2008 Conference Proceedings, Zadar, Croatia, 28-30 January. Vol. 3, Contributions to library science.
Publication date
2008
Notes
This conference paper is also available online at: http://edoc.hu-berlin.de/conferences/bobcatsss2008/