From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?

This study aims to analyze how digital adoption, such as internet access and ownership of technological devices, contributes to the educational continuity of children in Disadvantaged, Frontier, and Outermost or Tertinggal, Terdepan, and Terluar (3T) regions. The research employs the Propensity Scor...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Axellina Muara Setyanti, Silvi Asna Prestianawati, Muhammad Fawwaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kementerian Koordinator Bidang Pembangunan Manusia dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia 2025-06-01
Series:Salus Cultura
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jurnal.kemenkopmk.go.id/index.php/saluscultura/article/view/368
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849710126683914240
author Axellina Muara Setyanti
Silvi Asna Prestianawati
Muhammad Fawwaz
author_facet Axellina Muara Setyanti
Silvi Asna Prestianawati
Muhammad Fawwaz
author_sort Axellina Muara Setyanti
collection DOAJ
description This study aims to analyze how digital adoption, such as internet access and ownership of technological devices, contributes to the educational continuity of children in Disadvantaged, Frontier, and Outermost or Tertinggal, Terdepan, and Terluar (3T) regions. The research employs the Propensity Score Matching (PSM) method using SUSENAS 2022 data, which enables comparisons between households in 3T and non-3T regions with similar socio-economic characteristics to isolate the impact of digital adoption on educational access. The findings reveal that, after matching, there is no statistically significant difference in school participation between children in 3T and non-3T regions, as long as households have comparable access to technology and similar socio-economic conditions. When 3T households have internet connectivity, ownership of digital devices, and access to social protection on par with their non-3T counterparts, their children are just as likely to attend school. The implication is that policies focused solely on spatial targeting may overlook children in need outside 3T boundaries and overgeneralize those within them. As a result, educational interventions must shift toward multidimensional and needs-based strategies that prioritize digital inclusion, income security, and tailored social support.
format Article
id doaj-art-248b5d8da2814cdda9e8b499e199a33a
institution DOAJ
issn 2807-5560
2807-5447
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Kementerian Koordinator Bidang Pembangunan Manusia dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia
record_format Article
series Salus Cultura
spelling doaj-art-248b5d8da2814cdda9e8b499e199a33a2025-08-20T03:15:03ZengKementerian Koordinator Bidang Pembangunan Manusia dan Kebudayaan Republik IndonesiaSalus Cultura2807-55602807-54472025-06-0151142610.55480/saluscultura.v5i1.368368From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?Axellina Muara Setyanti0Silvi Asna Prestianawati1Muhammad Fawwaz2Universitas BrawijayaUniversitas BrawijayaUniversity of MalayaThis study aims to analyze how digital adoption, such as internet access and ownership of technological devices, contributes to the educational continuity of children in Disadvantaged, Frontier, and Outermost or Tertinggal, Terdepan, and Terluar (3T) regions. The research employs the Propensity Score Matching (PSM) method using SUSENAS 2022 data, which enables comparisons between households in 3T and non-3T regions with similar socio-economic characteristics to isolate the impact of digital adoption on educational access. The findings reveal that, after matching, there is no statistically significant difference in school participation between children in 3T and non-3T regions, as long as households have comparable access to technology and similar socio-economic conditions. When 3T households have internet connectivity, ownership of digital devices, and access to social protection on par with their non-3T counterparts, their children are just as likely to attend school. The implication is that policies focused solely on spatial targeting may overlook children in need outside 3T boundaries and overgeneralize those within them. As a result, educational interventions must shift toward multidimensional and needs-based strategies that prioritize digital inclusion, income security, and tailored social support.http://jurnal.kemenkopmk.go.id/index.php/saluscultura/article/view/368educational inequalitydigital adoption3t regionsinternet access
spellingShingle Axellina Muara Setyanti
Silvi Asna Prestianawati
Muhammad Fawwaz
From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?
Salus Cultura
educational inequality
digital adoption
3t regions
internet access
title From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?
title_full From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?
title_fullStr From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?
title_full_unstemmed From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?
title_short From Isolation to Inclusion: Does Digital Adoption Enhance Educational Access in Indonesia’s 3T Areas?
title_sort from isolation to inclusion does digital adoption enhance educational access in indonesia s 3t areas
topic educational inequality
digital adoption
3t regions
internet access
url http://jurnal.kemenkopmk.go.id/index.php/saluscultura/article/view/368
work_keys_str_mv AT axellinamuarasetyanti fromisolationtoinclusiondoesdigitaladoptionenhanceeducationalaccessinindonesias3tareas
AT silviasnaprestianawati fromisolationtoinclusiondoesdigitaladoptionenhanceeducationalaccessinindonesias3tareas
AT muhammadfawwaz fromisolationtoinclusiondoesdigitaladoptionenhanceeducationalaccessinindonesias3tareas