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Open Access, Broad Impact: Wi-Fi is Critical to America’s Classrooms

Wi-Fi unlocks an entire universe of digital opportunity for America's classrooms.

Wi-Fi plays a central role in America’s daily operations, from powering personal connectivity in the home to facilitating digital workplaces, education, healthcare, agriculturemanufacturing, and much more.

Without adequate spectrum for unlicensed use, America faces the possibility of Wi-Fi congestion, which would severely deteriorate the ability of small businesses or farms across the country to operate. Not only that, but America will lose out on significant economic growth, given how many critical sectors rely on Wi-Fi.

From story time in kindergarten to college-level computer science, today’s classrooms are powered by Wi-Fi. Reliable, high-speed connectivity has become as essential as textbooks and pencils, underpinning everything from daily instruction to collaboration and student research.

Remote & hybrid learning

Robust Wi-Fi is the backbone of remote and hybrid learning. Whether due to illness, travel, or changing classroom models, students increasingly rely on strong connections to stay engaged and complete coursework. Without it, educational gaps widen, and valuable learning opportunities are lost.

Unlocking digital resources

Inside the classroom, Wi-Fi opens doors to a vast universe of digital content.

  • No longer limited to printed textbooks, today students explore everything from video tutorials and virtual labs to real-time simulations and academic databases, all made accessible through seamless wireless access.
  • With fast and dependable connectivity, students can learn at their own pace and dive deeper into subjects that ignite their curiosity.

Collaboration & digital fluency

Wi-Fi also enables the collaborative, tech-driven learning that defines 21st-century classrooms.

  • Whether it’s brainstorming in real time or co-editing documents in the cloud, wireless connectivity supports the teamwork and digital fluency demanded in the modern workforce.

All of this depends on adequate spectrum access. Without sufficient spectrum, schools face slower connections and fewer opportunities for student digital engagement. Shared and unlicensed spectrum are critical to ensuring that every student, regardless of ZIP code, has the opportunity to thrive in a digital classroom.

To learn more about the important role that Wi-Fi and unlicensed spectrum play in the broadband ecosystem, visit NCTA.com.

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