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Franklin County and Columbus leaders are pitching in to help students outside the city school district get connected for remote fall classes.The鈥
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Ohio is now accepting applications for schools seeking funds to expand broadband accessibility. That program has lifted a restriction that supporters say鈥
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With all Columbus City Schools students attending at least some of their classes online in the fall, the city is using $7 million of federal coronavirus鈥
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Ohio's U.S. Senators are calling on Congress to expand broadband around the country, noting the growing importance the internet has played during the鈥
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Cleveland Metropolitan School District found that some families struggled to adapt to remote learning during the coronavirus pandemic, revealing big鈥
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Nearly 1 million Ohio households lack reliable broadband service, including 300,000 who don鈥檛 have any service at all. The Ohio House has passed a bill鈥
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With Ohio鈥檚 schools closed and lessons moved online for the rest of the academic year, most kids are spending more time on the computer. Millions of鈥
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School district administrations throughout Ohio are 鈥減robably relieved鈥 Gov. Mike DeWine made the call to keep students at K-12 schools out of the classroom for the remainder of the school year, Akron Public Schools spokesperson Mark Williamson speculated Tuesday, especially when reopening schools May 1 would have invited so many difficult questions with such short notice.
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Nearly a million Ohioans lack access to high-speed Internet. So doing schoolwork or regular work online is not an option unless users go in search of WiFi鈥
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The Columbus Board of Education has approved a $35,000 deal with Verizon to help get local students internet access.School administrators have scrambled鈥