Four Surveillance Technologies Creating Challenges for Education

Resource type
Book Section
Authors/contributors
Title
Four Surveillance Technologies Creating Challenges for Education
Abstract
“Ubiquitous AI”—embodied in cloud computing web services, coupled with sensors in phones and the physical world—is becoming infrastructural to cultural practices. It creates a surveillance society. We review the capabilities of four core surveillance technologies, all making headway into universities and PreK-12 schools: (1) location tracking, (2) facial identification, (3) automated speech recognition, and (4) social media mining. We pose primary issues educational research should investigate on cultural practices with these technologies. We interweave three priority themes: (1) how these technologies are shaping human development and learning; (2) current algorithmic biases and access inequities; and (3) the need for learners’ critical consciousness concerning their data privacy. We close with calls to action—research, policy and law, and practice.
Book Title
AI in Learning: Designing the Future
Place
Cham
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Date
2023
Pages
317-329
Language
en
ISBN
978-3-031-09687-7
Accessed
23/02/2024, 23:58
Library Catalogue
Springer Link
Citation
Pea, R. D., Biernacki, P., Bigman, M., Boles, K., Coelho, R., Docherty, V., Garcia, J., Lin, V., Nguyen, J., Pimentel, D., Pozos, R., Reynante, B., Roy, E., Southerton, E., Suzara, M., & Vishwanath, A. (2023). Four Surveillance Technologies Creating Challenges for Education. In H. Niemi, R. D. Pea, & Y. Lu (Eds.), AI in Learning: Designing the Future (pp. 317–329). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09687-7_19