NYC Libraries to Offer 5,000 WiFi Hotspots to Students, Families

In New York City, more than 800,000 households do not have broadband connection. To help close the homework gap for these students, the New York Department of Education announced that the city partnered with its three library systems, Google and Sprint to distribute 5,000 free WiFi hotspots to public school students and families without home Internet access.

The initiative is the next phase of the New York Public Library’s Library HotSpot program, which started in 2014 to help close the digital divide for more than 2 million New Yorkers without access to broadband Internet at home. In 2015, the program expanded to include Brooklyn Public Library and Queens Library, as well as Google and Sprint.

The next round of the program involves distributing 5,000 hotspots from Sprint, which eligible families can “rent” at no cost for one year. Google previously donated $1 million toward the program. To be eligible, a household must meet the following requirements:

  • No Internet access when signing up;
  • At least one student in grades pre-K–12 enrolled in a NYC public school; and
  • At least one adult resident with a fine-free library card; and
  • The renter must attend a lending event at one of the three branches.

Hotspots will be offered at 46 library branches run by the three libraries. The branches are located near the department’s Community Schools, or “neighborhood hubs where students receive high-quality academic instruction, families can access social services and communities congregate to share resources and address their common challenges,” according to a news release.

The Library HotSpot program aligns with the White House’s ConnectED initiative to bring next-generation broadband to 99 percent of U.S. students by 2018.

To learn more about the Library HotSpot program, visit the New York Public Library site.

About the Author

Sri Ravipati is Web producer for THE Journal and Campus Technology. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • open laptop with data streams

    OpenAI Launches AI-Powered Web Browser

    OpenAI has unveiled ChatGPT Atlas, a standalone browser that places ChatGPT at the heart of everyday web activity. This release represents a major expansion of the company's efforts to reshape how users search, browse, and complete tasks online.

  • woman using network-connected printer

    The Hidden Cyber Risk in Schools

    Printers may not be glamorous, but they are an often-overlooked attack vector that should be part of every district's cybersecurity strategy.

  • tutor and student working together at a laptop

    You've Paid for Tutoring. Here's How to Make Sure It Works.

    As districts and states nationwide invest in tutoring, it remains one of the best tools in our educational toolkit, yielding positive impacts on student learning at scale. But to maximize return on investment, both financially and academically, we must focus on improving implementation.

  • mathematical formulas

    McGraw Hill Launches AI-Powered ALEKS for Calculus

    McGraw Hill has added ALEKS for Calculus to its lineup of ALEKS digital learning products, bringing AI-powered personalized learning support to the calculus classroom.