The Isolated Children's Parents' Association says the difficulty in accessing stable internet in the bush is proving to be harmful to the education of young people.

Federal President Wendy Hick said more needs to be done to secure internet accessibility and she's met with Federal Government representatives to highlight the problem of poor internet access in remote areas.

She said many distance education programs rely solely on internet access and many remote homes either experience slow speeds or hit low data limits quickly.

Ms Hick said while the Sky Muster long-term satellite will help, a solution is needed before that comes online later this year.

"Congestion seems to be the main problem, and they do seem to be trying to get people moved off the satellite if at all possible, whether it's moving on to broadband or other opportunities to release some of the congestion," she said.

"It's really limiting at the moment, if people hit their maximum they become shaped and it's really difficult to proceed."

The Federal Government plans to provide a dedicated education port to provide internet access for remote school children, a move the ICPA welcomes.

"They've announced that they're going to be allocating 50 gigabytes per student that's enrolled in distance education, up to three students," Ms Hick said.

"So that'll be up to 150 gigabytes they'll be eligible for on a dedicated education port and we're quite excited to see that type of development happening."