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In Short

State U Online, the Wisconsin Idea, and Broadband Barriers

This blog post on Higher Ed Watch, a blog from the 国产视频 Foundation’s , as part of a series of posts related to the April 2013 report .

For a kid growing up in rural northern Wisconsin, attending the state university offers a key avenue to broaden career opportunities or gain skills to better run the family farm. In recent years, as public institutions like the University of Wisconsin (UW) have increasingly embraced online courses and flexible degree options, the university鈥檚 resources may seem 鈥攂ut only if you live in a part of the state that has adequate and affordable broadband.

UW has long been devoted to serving the public interest, cultivating one of the biggest and most ambitious extension programs in the country over the last century. 鈥,鈥 first articulated by Governer Robert LaFollette and University President Charles Van Hise, was a vision for the university in which its academic activities were connected to every local community. Van Hise declared in 1904: 鈥淚 shall never be content until the beneficent influence of the University reaches every home in the state.鈥 It suggests that 鈥渢he boundaries of campus are the boundaries of the state.鈥

The , which began as mail correspondence programs and lecture tours, now serves nearly 150,000 students a year through regular coursework and continuing education classes. Online courses began to appear during the late 1990s. Today, students can access all of the virtual options through , which  from online certificates to doctoral degrees. There is even a  option which lets students move at their own pace and allows the use of free resources, including Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), to promote affordability.

The Wisconsin eCampus鈥攆eatured in 国产视频鈥檚 policy report could be the innovation that enables the 鈥淲isconsin Idea鈥 to be fully realized. But a critical roadblock remains: ubiquitous and affordable access to broadband. According to a  by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), nearly 30 percent of households in Wisconsin don鈥檛 have high-speed access. A  by  estimated that broadband adoption is about 64 percent overall. Most of these unconnected households are in rural communities, where broadband access 鈥攊f it鈥檚 even available at all. Fifteen percent of those without broadband rely on dial-up Internet service, which is completely inadequate to stream lectures or participate in real-time, interactive coursework.

In the major metropolitan areas, consumers may have as many as  offering high-speed wired or wireless broadband service. But choices are scarce and speeds low in the more remote parts of Wisconsin. Access is likely limited to wireless, which doesn鈥檛 require as much physical infrastructure but is slower, more unreliable, and often encumbered with .

And there鈥檚 little incentive for large Internet service providers to improve their existing offerings. In fact, as part of AT&T鈥檚 recently announced plan to , the company acknowledged that it will not deploy more reliable and faster wired broadband to underserved communities, but only offer slower and more expensive 4G connectivity.

Publicly funded projects could be part of the solution. For example, the FCC created the  in 2011, restructuring a portion of the existing telephone-based Universal Service Fund to support broadband connectivity  as well. But only incumbent local telephone companies are eligible for the subsidies, and the two biggest鈥擜T&T and Verizon鈥 in the program and expand their DSL offerings into currently unserved areas. Meanwhile, many of the smaller providers, including a number of  which serve some of the hardest-to-reach places, can鈥檛 participate in the program unless the eligibility requirements are changed.

While they are not interested in adequately connecting underserved areas, providers like AT&T have also actively fought to stifle any competition from other networks receiving public funding. This included   in 2011, a non-profit co-op dedicated to providing next-generation Internet access to most of Wisconsin鈥檚 schools and libraries. AT&T and other private telecoms pushed for a bill that would have  system from supporting WiscNet. Had the legislation passed, the University would have had to return $37.5 million in federal stimulus funds that it had received through the federal  (BTOP) to expand the network鈥檚 reach and capacity to bolster the UW-Extension system. Major telecom companies have also  in the state, including a next-generation fiber-to-the-home network owned by the public electric utility in , WI, which  to serve rural residents.

A  managed to help save WiscNet and UW-Extension was able to  to improve connectivity for education institutions across the state. The university also created the  with the explicit goal of 鈥渓everag[ing] and extend[ing] the education and outreach work鈥 begun through the BTOP program. These are positive steps taken by the University to find sustainable ways to address a critical infrastructure problem for certain parts of Wisconsin. But policymakers and the public will need to do more to ensure the 鈥溾 endures and prospers in the digital age.

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Danielle Kehl

Fellow, Open Technology Institute

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State U Online, the Wisconsin Idea, and Broadband Barriers