Source: Getty
Open viewing: some students felt the collection of data to be 鈥榮nooping鈥
UK universities are monitoring students鈥 information to help them to improve their academic performance but are giving insufficient thought to the effectiveness of the technology they use and the rights of those they track.
This is according to Sharon Slade, senior lecturer in the Faculty of Business, Management and Law at The Open University, which is believed to have become the first institution in the UK to produce a publicly available written policy on the ethical use of student data for learning analytics 鈥 the practice of collecting and analysing student data with the intention of optimising their educational experience.
According to Dr Slade, although there is often an inherent assumption that knowing more about a learner鈥檚 behaviour and using it to tailor support is advantageous, the collection of such data raises a number of ethical challenges.
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鈥淧eople are getting carried away by the momentum of the developments in this area,鈥 she told 糖心Vlog.
鈥淸Software] developers are extremely enthusiastic about what data can deliver, but none of them is really questioning the concerns 鈥 things like the privacy of students or the accuracy of the algorithms used,鈥 she continued.
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Poor technology, she said, could 鈥減ut labels on students鈥 based entirely on the available information, which risked incorrectly stereotyping learners.
During the development of the policy on the ethical use of student data, Dr Slade carried out a three-week consultation with about 60 students to find out what they knew about the use of learning analytics.
The majority, she said, were not aware that the university had both the ability to collect and analyse information about how they studied and was already doing so. Many students said that they did not like the idea that analyses could be applied to them as individuals, describing it as 鈥渟nooping鈥, while others were more relaxed about the practice.
鈥淥n the one hand, students don鈥檛 like being snooped on, but on the other hand they complained when they received generic emails that were not relevant to them,鈥 Dr Slade said. 鈥淭hey wanted to know why their university didn鈥檛 appear to know who they were.鈥
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She said she hoped that the new policy would begin a debate in higher education about what level of consent is required from students before universities can use their data.
The current 鈥渟tandard鈥, she said, was that universities used data, and no choice to 鈥渙pt out鈥 was offered to students.
鈥淲e have been using learning analytics for a year or more,鈥 Dr Slade said, adding that a process of 鈥渋nformed consent鈥 was in place, whereby students were deemed to have consented to the use of their data when they registered at the university.
鈥淭his policy doesn鈥檛 change that, but we are now making students aware of that practice in a way which other universities are not.鈥
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Dr Slade said that although the use of learning analytics could be hugely beneficial to students, she wanted them to know that The Open University was listening to their concerns and was aware of the issues surrounding the use of such data.
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