Surveillance Education: Navigating the Conspicuous Absence of Privacy in Schools: Critical Interventions
Autor Nolan Higdon, Allison Butleren Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 aug 2024
In our era of surveillance capitalism, digital media technologies are ever more intertwined into the educational process. Schools are presented with digital technologies as tools of convenience for gathering and grading student work, as tools of support to foster a more equitable learning environment, and as tools of safety for predicting or preventing violence or monitoring mental, emotional, and physical health. Despite a dearth of evidence to confirm their effectiveness, digital data collection and tracking is often presented as a way to improve educational outcomes and safety. This book challenges these fallacious assumptions and argues that the use of digital media technologies has caused great harm to students by subjecting them to oppressive levels of surveillance, impinging upon their right to privacy, and harvesting their personal data on behalf of Big-Tech. In doing so, the authors draw upon interviews from K–12 and higher education students, teachers, and staff, civil rights and technology lawyers, and educational technological programmers. The authors also provide practical guidance for teachers, administrators, students, and their families seeking to identify and combat surveillance in education.
This urgent, eye-opening book will be of interest to students and educators with interests in critical media literacy and pedagogy and the sociology of technology and education.
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
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Paperback (1) | 271.64 lei 3-5 săpt. | +15.00 lei 4-10 zile |
Taylor & Francis – 2 aug 2024 | 271.64 lei 3-5 săpt. | +15.00 lei 4-10 zile |
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Taylor & Francis – 2 aug 2024 | 928.04 lei 6-8 săpt. |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032812274
ISBN-10: 1032812273
Pagini: 182
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Critical Interventions
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032812273
Pagini: 182
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Critical Interventions
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate CoreCuprins
Introduction 1. The Legality of School Surveillance 2. The Culture of School Surveillance 3. The Harm in School Surveillance 4. Resisting Surveillance Schooling
Notă biografică
Nolan Higdon is a founding member of the Critical Media Literacy Conference of the Americas, Project Censored National Judge, author, and lecturer at Merrill College and the Education Department at the University of California, Santa Cruz, USA. Higdon’s areas of concentration include podcasting, digital culture, news media history, propaganda, and critical media literacy. All of Higdon’s work is available at Substack (https://nolanhigdon.substack.com/). He is the author of The Anatomy of Fake News: A Critical News Literacy Education (2020) and Let’s Agree to Disagree: A Critical Thinking Guide to Communication, Conflict Management, and Critical Media Literacy (Routledge, 2022), and co-author of The Media and Me: A Guide to Critical Media Literacy for Young People (2022). Higdon is a regular source of expertise for CBS, NBC, The New York Times, and The San Francisco Chronicle.
Allison Butler is a Senior Lecturer and Director of the Media Literacy Certificate Program in the Department of Communication at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA. She is also Co-Director of the Mass Media Literacy non-profit organization, where she develops and runs training programs for teachers covering critical media literacy in K–12 schools, Vice President on the Board of the Media Freedom Foundation, and a spokesperson for Project Censored. Her research focuses on critical media literacy and critiques of surveillance technologies in education. She is the author of Educating Media Literacy: The Need for Teacher Education in Critical Media Literacy (2020), and co-author of Critical Media Literacy and Civic Learning: Interactive Explorations for Students and Teachers (2021) and The Media and Me: A Guide to Critical Media Literacy for Young People (2022).
Allison Butler is a Senior Lecturer and Director of the Media Literacy Certificate Program in the Department of Communication at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA. She is also Co-Director of the Mass Media Literacy non-profit organization, where she develops and runs training programs for teachers covering critical media literacy in K–12 schools, Vice President on the Board of the Media Freedom Foundation, and a spokesperson for Project Censored. Her research focuses on critical media literacy and critiques of surveillance technologies in education. She is the author of Educating Media Literacy: The Need for Teacher Education in Critical Media Literacy (2020), and co-author of Critical Media Literacy and Civic Learning: Interactive Explorations for Students and Teachers (2021) and The Media and Me: A Guide to Critical Media Literacy for Young People (2022).
Recenzii
“Convenience, support, and safety: Advocates of digital surveillance promise tempting solutions to fundamental challenges in K-12 and higher education. But at what price? In Surveillance Education, Nolan Higdon and Allison Butler expose how ed-tech companies violate students’ privacy, thwart their learning, and profit from collection of their data. Drawing on interviews with teachers, administrators, government officials, and students, Surveillance Education mobilizes insights from critical media literacy to make practical recommendations for enhancing privacy, trust, and equity as foundations for resistance to the inappropriate use of surveillance tech in our schools.”
Andy Lee Roth, associate director of Project Censored
“While much is written about the harmful effects of digital devices and social media on young people’s mental health, far less attention is paid to the ways a multitude of technologies are used to monitor, observe, and control children, teenagers, and young adults. In this well-researched and insightful book, Nolan Higdon and Allison Butler reverse the lens on the surveillance education industries by subjecting their motivations, methods, and goals to inquiry and analysis informed by the traditions of critical theory, critical pedagogy, and critical media literacy. In democratic societies, the right to privacy is as essential as the right to speak, and education is central to the development of a knowledgeable citizenry and a primary locus for the socialization of our youth. Higdon and Butler’s research raises important questions about how our educational institutions may be hindering the development of democracy by normalizing surveillance and treating students as objects of suspicion rather than autonomous members of a democratic citizenry. If you are a student, a parent, an educator, an activist, a legislator, or simply a human being that cares about justice, equality, and freedom, Surveillance Education is an important book, a necessary and compelling read, and, potentially, the first step in an intervention that can begin to challenge the for-profit surveillance industries and their allies.”
Bill Yousman, Professor of Communication and Media Studies, Sacred Heart University, USA
"Surveillance Education: Navigating the Conspicuous Absence of Privacy in Schools by Critical Media Literacy scholars and activists, Nolan Higdon and Allison Butler, is an essential read for anyone concerned with how privacy, free speech, and trust are being systematically eroded within the evolving landscape of K-12 and higher education in the digital age. Higdon and Butler offer a compelling examination of the legal, social, cultural, political, economic and pedagogical implications of the Trojan horse of digital technologies. They shine a light on the unequal exchange of streamlined administrative processes and classroom accessibility and sometimes safety for access to the data of minors by government and corporate third parties. Using a Critical Media Literacy framework, drawing on Foucault’s Discipline and Punish (1977), and using historical examples of the government surveillance of student activists from the Vietnam War era to the present, Higdon and Butler critique the consequences of the neoliberalization and hyper-privatization of public education. This is a brave new world where earnest DEI initiatives are unknowingly undermined by algorithms of oppression and the implied consent of minors who only wish to learn offers a springboard to detrimental market and government policy initiatives that undermine the strength of their communities. And just when it seems darkest and most dystopian in the panopticon of digital surveillance, Higdon and Butler provide a detailed plan of resistance for educators, parents, and policymakers committed to safeguarding the future of our educational institutions and our participatory democracy and they provide hopeful examples of successful community action as a blueprint for future struggles.
Nicholas L. Baham III, Professor of Ethnic Studies, California State University East Bay, USA
“Often presented as innovative and essential for quality education, this book shows us the dark underside of surveillance technology, exposing its intrusive and destructive effects on students and creative learning. This revelatory text is exciting and ultimately uplifting as it shows us a pathway to a new pedagogy free of these oppressive constraints.”
Robin Andersen, Professor Emerita of Media Studies, Fordham University, USA
"Engagingly written and supported by detailed empirical data, Surveillance Education is an urgent text for our times. It documents the latest stage in the increasing invasion of our public institutions by private interests, and the ever more intricate surveillance of young people, and indeed of teachers. While the situations it describes are sometimes quite horrifying, it also offers a potential way forward, in the form of critical media literacy. This is very much necessary reading!"
David Buckingham, Honorary Professor, Institute of Education, University College London, UK
Andy Lee Roth, associate director of Project Censored
“While much is written about the harmful effects of digital devices and social media on young people’s mental health, far less attention is paid to the ways a multitude of technologies are used to monitor, observe, and control children, teenagers, and young adults. In this well-researched and insightful book, Nolan Higdon and Allison Butler reverse the lens on the surveillance education industries by subjecting their motivations, methods, and goals to inquiry and analysis informed by the traditions of critical theory, critical pedagogy, and critical media literacy. In democratic societies, the right to privacy is as essential as the right to speak, and education is central to the development of a knowledgeable citizenry and a primary locus for the socialization of our youth. Higdon and Butler’s research raises important questions about how our educational institutions may be hindering the development of democracy by normalizing surveillance and treating students as objects of suspicion rather than autonomous members of a democratic citizenry. If you are a student, a parent, an educator, an activist, a legislator, or simply a human being that cares about justice, equality, and freedom, Surveillance Education is an important book, a necessary and compelling read, and, potentially, the first step in an intervention that can begin to challenge the for-profit surveillance industries and their allies.”
Bill Yousman, Professor of Communication and Media Studies, Sacred Heart University, USA
"Surveillance Education: Navigating the Conspicuous Absence of Privacy in Schools by Critical Media Literacy scholars and activists, Nolan Higdon and Allison Butler, is an essential read for anyone concerned with how privacy, free speech, and trust are being systematically eroded within the evolving landscape of K-12 and higher education in the digital age. Higdon and Butler offer a compelling examination of the legal, social, cultural, political, economic and pedagogical implications of the Trojan horse of digital technologies. They shine a light on the unequal exchange of streamlined administrative processes and classroom accessibility and sometimes safety for access to the data of minors by government and corporate third parties. Using a Critical Media Literacy framework, drawing on Foucault’s Discipline and Punish (1977), and using historical examples of the government surveillance of student activists from the Vietnam War era to the present, Higdon and Butler critique the consequences of the neoliberalization and hyper-privatization of public education. This is a brave new world where earnest DEI initiatives are unknowingly undermined by algorithms of oppression and the implied consent of minors who only wish to learn offers a springboard to detrimental market and government policy initiatives that undermine the strength of their communities. And just when it seems darkest and most dystopian in the panopticon of digital surveillance, Higdon and Butler provide a detailed plan of resistance for educators, parents, and policymakers committed to safeguarding the future of our educational institutions and our participatory democracy and they provide hopeful examples of successful community action as a blueprint for future struggles.
Nicholas L. Baham III, Professor of Ethnic Studies, California State University East Bay, USA
“Often presented as innovative and essential for quality education, this book shows us the dark underside of surveillance technology, exposing its intrusive and destructive effects on students and creative learning. This revelatory text is exciting and ultimately uplifting as it shows us a pathway to a new pedagogy free of these oppressive constraints.”
Robin Andersen, Professor Emerita of Media Studies, Fordham University, USA
"Engagingly written and supported by detailed empirical data, Surveillance Education is an urgent text for our times. It documents the latest stage in the increasing invasion of our public institutions by private interests, and the ever more intricate surveillance of young people, and indeed of teachers. While the situations it describes are sometimes quite horrifying, it also offers a potential way forward, in the form of critical media literacy. This is very much necessary reading!"
David Buckingham, Honorary Professor, Institute of Education, University College London, UK
Descriere
Surveillance Education explores the pervasive use of digital surveillance technologies in schools and assesses its pernicious effects on students. Recognising that the use of digital technologies will persist, the authors instead offer practical ways to ameliorate their impact.