4.6 Article

Closing the Digital Gender Gap among Foreign University Students: The Challenges Ahead

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su141912230

Keywords

ICT; higher education; digital gender divide; foreign students; inclusion

Funding

  1. MCIN/AEI [PID2020-114576RB-100]
  2. Vicerrectorado de Investigacion, Transferencia y Divulgacion de la Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena. Beca de especializacion asociada a actividades de I + D + I [RV-245/22]

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New and advanced technologies have brought great changes to universities, but the digital gender gap and the digital gaps between students from different countries hinder the achievement of sustainable development goals.
In today's world, new and advanced forms of technology are increasingly providing great changes in universities, thus generating new possibilities and impacting pedagogy and learning methodology. Unfortunately, not all students can use these tools in the same way and with the same ability. Not only are there digital gender gaps that limit women from enjoying these learning opportunities, but there are also digital gaps between foreign and natives' students who have been trained in these technologies in their countries of origin, which impedes the achievement of the sustainable development goals planned for 2030. This study addresses theoretical foundations on the digital gender gap in university studies and provides an econometric analysis, through a simple linear regression, on the existence of a correlation between this digital gender gap and the university study gap by gender. A more specific analysis is also presented on the digital gender gap in the case of foreign students from four groups of countries, according to their income. The results show, on one hand, that differences in the access and use of technologies represent one of the factors that affects the percentage of graduates in higher education by gender; on the other, that there is a highly visible digital divide between countries with high income, compared to low- and lower-middle-income countries.

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