| dc.description.abstract | This study investigates the extent to which educational technology can promote equitable
educational experiences in degree colleges across the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of
Bangladesh, a region marked by geographical isolation, infrastructural instability, economic
disparity, and sociolinguistic diversity. The primary objective was to explore how technology
influences access, utilization, and pedagogical readiness among students, teachers, and parents.
Guided by four research questions and employing a Convergent Parallel Mixed- Methods design,
the study collected quantitative survey data and qualitative reflections from 120 participants
across six government and women’s colleges in Rangamati, Khagrachhari, and Bandarban.
Quantitative analyses revealed that while basic device ownership is relatively high (81.7%
smartphone access), meaningful and equitable usage remains limited. Statistically significant
gaps emerged between institutional contexts and stakeholder groups, including an access
inequality associated with infrastructural precarity and a notable pedagogical readiness gap
among teachers. Qualitative findings highlighted persistent challenges such as unstable
electricity, high data costs, limited localized digital content, and language barriers affecting
comprehension and engagement. Despite students showing strong motivation to use technology,
these structural constraints significantly restrict the transformative potential of digital learning
tools in the CHT. The integrated results indicate that technology alone cannot close the digital
divide without targeted infrastructural support, context-appropriate curriculum materials, and
enhanced teacher training. The study concludes that sustainable progress toward equitable digital
education in the CHT requires policy attention to localized digital solutions, investment in reliable connectivity, and capacity-building initiatives that prepare teachers to deliver lowresource digital pedagogy suited to the realities of marginalized hill communities. | en_US |