Evaluation of the Home Access Programme Print
Friday, 25 March 2011

cjewitt.jpg

Project Leader
Carey Jewitt

Other Project Partners
SQW Consultancy

Ipsos MORI

Project Details
December 2008 - May 2011

Keywords
Home access, Internet, Low-income households

 

Project Aims

The Home Access Program (HAP) was a £300 million pound UK Government program launched in Autumn 2008 and closed in Spring 2011, with Becta (British Educational Communications and Technology Agency) as the delivery agency. It allowed low-income households with children aged 5 to 19 years to apply for a grant to purchase a computer (a laptop, Net-book or desktop), free Internet connectivity and technical support for one year from an accredited supplier.†

The program was underpinned by an explicit intention to help to address social inequity, and to provide opportunities for local education authorities to raise the quality of education for all. More specifically, the program objectives were to provide wider opportunities for pupils to engage in formal and informal learning, to increase parental engagement with schools and colleges, to increase the attainment of pupils, and to increase awareness of the economic and social benefits of having access to ICT at home.

The program awarded grants to more than 250,000 families and more than 8,000 children with profound disabilities, special educational needs or who face challenges accessing computers and the internet.

Becta commissioned a consortium of SQW Consulting with Ipsos MORI and London Knowledge Lab (IoE) to conduct a longitudinal evaluation of the programme over the period 2009 to 2011. The evaluation is formative, in that it identified lessons from the pilot phase in order to help shape the design of the national roll-out, and summative, in that it seeks to establish the net impacts of the intervention.

Key details, themes, etc. here

The overall evaluation research questions were as follows:

  • Has the programme succeeded in providing home access to technology for the target group? What has been the net effect of the programme?

  • Is there a measurable increase in the proportion of families within the target group who use ICT to support their learning? How does this proportion compare with that in more wealthy socio-economic groups?

  • Is there a measurable increase in the proportion of families within the target group whose perception of the value of having ICT at home to support learning has increased?

  • Does home access to technology lead to the intended benefits, including greater use of home ICT for educational purposes, a more personalised education, enhanced motivation and skills, and increased educational attainment?

  • Is the programme effective and efficient in delivering home access to the target group?

The methods employed include Stakeholder consultations, research and policy literature review, analyses of national, local and beneficiary data, case studies,† and an in-home survey.

Key publications

The Home Access Pilot evaluation report and one year review are available for download

 


 

 
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