ChatterBank2 mins ago
Should Those On Benefits Be Offered Cut-Price Computers And Broadband?
52 Answers
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Two reasons why I'd say yes:
"It will also help the Government in their push to see 80 per cent of submissions for universal credit to happen online."
"The initiative ... sets out to provide computers to help 800,000 British schoolchildren who lack home internet access."
I'm not particularly a fan of putting benefit systems on-line, certainly not exclusively, but if you are going to do it you may as well make it so that those most likely to need to use the system are actually able to do so. Meanwhile with homework tasks becoming increasingly dependent on online activities those children without easy internet access are disadvantaged.
So it's a conditional yes from me. If the government is cutting back [funding for] library services and switching benefits systems to online access, then it has to provide this support. But it shouldn't really be doing either of those two things anyway.
"It will also help the Government in their push to see 80 per cent of submissions for universal credit to happen online."
"The initiative ... sets out to provide computers to help 800,000 British schoolchildren who lack home internet access."
I'm not particularly a fan of putting benefit systems on-line, certainly not exclusively, but if you are going to do it you may as well make it so that those most likely to need to use the system are actually able to do so. Meanwhile with homework tasks becoming increasingly dependent on online activities those children without easy internet access are disadvantaged.
So it's a conditional yes from me. If the government is cutting back [funding for] library services and switching benefits systems to online access, then it has to provide this support. But it shouldn't really be doing either of those two things anyway.
Ab Editor, there was a scheme 2 years ago that those on low incomes and on child benefit could claim free laptops for their children they came with restricted access.
It was very popular.
It was very popular.
it all depends on where they live, if someone lives in a village without a job centre or library (where there is free internet access) it might cost them £5 or more a day to travel in to a town with a free internet access location. Most jobs are advertised online these days which automatically means they are inaccessible by anyone without easy access to the internet. In our village owever we have a small library that is open 2 half days and 2 full days a week and they have 6 internet linked computers that are free to use and so there is no need to worry about being cut off from the internet. The only issue is that after schools finish for the day the computers are booked by kids who have no internet at home and spend an hour or so after school in the library on the internet .
Yes, if microsoft are paying for it. It's true that some employers only offer and accept applications online; a postie told me that the her employers had started that. And nowadays a degree of computer awareness and skill is almost as much a part of the essentials of everyday life as writing is; that's why our national curriculum has children on computers from such an early age.
Well if my observations are correct, there are not many who are on benefits, that do not own a smart phone, because I see them using them outside the post-office on a Monday morning, after they have collected their benefits.
So I am sure they must also own computers, along side their large flat screen TVs etc.
So I am sure they must also own computers, along side their large flat screen TVs etc.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.