
Internet-savvy African Americans blog more than their white counterparts, study finds
While African Americans as a whole are less likely to afford laptops and personal computers, Internet-savvy blacks, on average, blog one and a half times to nearly twice as much as whites, while Hispanics blog at the same rate as whites, according to a study published in the March online issue of the journal, Information, Communication & Society.
"Blacks consume less online content, but once online, are more likely to produce it," said the study’s author, Jen Schradie, a doctoral candidate in sociology at UC Berkeley and a researcher at the campus’s Berkeley Center for New Media.
Schradie analyzed data from more than 40,000 Americans surveyed between 2002 and 2008 for the Pew Internet and American Life Project, which tracks Internet use and social media trends. Her latest findings follow up on a 2011 study in which Schradie found a "digital divide" among online content producers based on education and socio-economic status.
While her latest study echoes earlier findings that blogs, websites and video-sharing sites represent the perspectives of college-educated, Web 2.0-savvy users, it sheds new light on the racial breakdown of those producing online content.
But, she said, "While blacks are more likely to blog than whites, it doesn’t mean the digital divide is over. People with more income and education are still more likely to blog than those with just a high school education and Internet access."





» Share this page: