Skip to main content
Home
  • Collections
  • Browse
  • Services
  • Subscribe
  • How to
  • About
  • My APO
  • Log in
  • Add a resource

Sort by

  • Relevancesort descending
  • Date published

Filter by resource type:

  • Report (1) Apply Report filter

Filter by date published:

  • March 2008 (1) Apply March 2008 filter

Filter by apo collection(s):

  • Digital Inclusion (1) Apply Digital Inclusion filter
  • Educational Justice (1) Apply Educational Justice filter

Filter by broad subject area(s):

  • Education (1) Apply Education filter

Filter by subject(s):

  • (-) Remove Children filter Children
  • (-) Remove Computers and children filter Computers and children
  • (-) Remove Internet access filter Internet access
  • Access to information (1) Apply Access to information filter
  • Computer literacy (1) Apply Computer literacy filter
  • Education (1) Apply Education filter

Filter by geographic coverage:

  • Australia (1) Apply Australia filter

Filter by author/creator:

  • Daniel O. Beltran (1) Apply Daniel O. Beltran filter
  • Kuntal K. Das (1) Apply Kuntal K. Das filter
  • Robert W. Fairlie (1) Apply Robert W. Fairlie filter

Filter by publisher/producer:

  • Centre for Economic Policy Research (1) Apply Centre for Economic Policy Research filter

Filter by journal name:

Filter by content type:

  • Resource (1) Apply Resource filter

Filter by party type:

Filter by content association:

  • (-) Remove Australian National University filter Australian National University

› Australian National University › Children › Computers and children › Internet access

Video

The search found 1 result in 0.081 seconds.

Search results

    Report

    Are computers good for children? The effects of home computers on educational outcomes
    27 Mar 2008
    136
    Daniel O. Beltran, Kuntal K. Das, Robert W. Fairlie
    Centre for Economic Policy Research

    This report explores the causal relationship between computer ownership and high school graduation and other educational outcomes.

    Teenagers who have access to home computers are 6 to 8 percentage points more likely to graduate from high school than teenagers who do not have home...

Discover

  • Collections
  • Browse
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Courses
  • Calls & Notices
  • Monthly Archive

Services

  • Subscribe
  • Add a resource
  • Advertise
  • Curated Content

Collaborate

  • Contact Us
  • APO Blog
  • Major Projects
  • Privacy Policy

Connect

 


© 2019 Analysis & Policy Observatory (APO), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 3.0 Australia (CC-BY-NC 3.0 AU) License