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10/7/2008
Ninety percent of college students in the United States say WiFi access is as essential to education as classrooms and computers, and nearly three in five say they wouldn't go to a college that doesn't have free WiFi, according to a survey by the WiFi Alliance and Wakefield Research. What's more, 79 percent said that without WiFi access, college would be a lot harder.
In conjunction with the WiFi Alliance, Wakefield Research surveyed 501 U.S. college students in September 2008. The WiFi alliance has a membership made up of companies involved in WiFi technology and services.
Other survey findings:
"WiFi is expected as part of today's campus experience both from an educational perspective as well as from a social perspective. Students expect WiFi so that they can learn anytime and anywhere on campus as well as always be available for friends and family," said Stan Schatt, vice president and research director at ABI Research. "We expect to see WiFi penetration in U.S. universities at 99 percent by 2013."
Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.
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