Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?

In 2009, just 27% of American teens with mobile phones reported using their devices to access the internet. However, teens from lower income families and minority teens were significantly more likely to use their phones to go online. Together, these surprising trends suggest a potential narrowing of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Katie Brown, Scott W. Campbell, Rich Ling
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2011-05-01
Series:Future Internet
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1999-5903/3/2/144/
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spelling doaj-23a6e4d74df742758e41b7e907f638072020-11-24T22:45:49ZengMDPI AGFuture Internet1999-59032011-05-013214415810.3390/fi3020144Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?Katie BrownScott W. CampbellRich LingIn 2009, just 27% of American teens with mobile phones reported using their devices to access the internet. However, teens from lower income families and minority teens were significantly more likely to use their phones to go online. Together, these surprising trends suggest a potential narrowing of the digital divide, offering internet access to those without other means of going online. This is an important move, as, in today’s society, internet access is central to active citizenship in general and teen citizenship in particular. Yet the cost of this move toward equal access is absorbed by those who can least afford it: Teenagers from low income households. Using survey and focus group data from a national study of “Teens and Mobile Phone Use” (released by Pew and the University of Michigan in 2010), this article helps identify and explain this and other emergent trends for teen use (as well as non-use) of the internet through mobile phones.http://www.mdpi.com/1999-5903/3/2/144/digital divideinternetmobile phonecell phoneteenstexting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katie Brown
Scott W. Campbell
Rich Ling
spellingShingle Katie Brown
Scott W. Campbell
Rich Ling
Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?
Future Internet
digital divide
internet
mobile phone
cell phone
teens
texting
author_facet Katie Brown
Scott W. Campbell
Rich Ling
author_sort Katie Brown
title Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?
title_short Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?
title_full Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?
title_fullStr Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?
title_full_unstemmed Mobile Phones Bridging the Digital Divide for Teens in the US?
title_sort mobile phones bridging the digital divide for teens in the us?
publisher MDPI AG
series Future Internet
issn 1999-5903
publishDate 2011-05-01
description In 2009, just 27% of American teens with mobile phones reported using their devices to access the internet. However, teens from lower income families and minority teens were significantly more likely to use their phones to go online. Together, these surprising trends suggest a potential narrowing of the digital divide, offering internet access to those without other means of going online. This is an important move, as, in today’s society, internet access is central to active citizenship in general and teen citizenship in particular. Yet the cost of this move toward equal access is absorbed by those who can least afford it: Teenagers from low income households. Using survey and focus group data from a national study of “Teens and Mobile Phone Use” (released by Pew and the University of Michigan in 2010), this article helps identify and explain this and other emergent trends for teen use (as well as non-use) of the internet through mobile phones.
topic digital divide
internet
mobile phone
cell phone
teens
texting
url http://www.mdpi.com/1999-5903/3/2/144/
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