
"6th and 7th grade have cameras. This kid looks like they're editing their MySpace page...they don't even realize that we're watching. I always like to mess with them and take a picture...nine times out of ten they duck out of the way, then they shut down and get to work," Ackerman said. "I think kids know what is expected of them but they also want to do all their other things and they feel that as long as they're doing their work there's nothing wrong with them chatting, looking at themselves in the mirror, as long as it gets done in X amount of time that they have."
Ackerman's comments are drawing a great deal of attention in the wake of the Lower Merion case but the two situations are different enough to warrant separate examination. At IS 339, the emphasis is apparently on prodding students to get back school work, not on using the webcam (allegedly) to provide proof of inappropriate behavior. The remote observation we see on camera is also occurring during school hours, when both laptop and student are on school property. Finally, it's not clear if the parents and students of IS 339 are aware that the school-issued laptops can be monitored remotely.
The staff and administrators at IS 339 deserve a great deal of credit for turning the school around as significantly as they have in such a short time, but issues like this drive home the need to create laptop remote viewing policies that allow the school to achieve its own goals (ensuring that systems are used appropriately, keeping students on-task) without fundamentally violating student privacy. These two goals are not necessarily in conflict. It would be a step in the right direction to establish review policies that ensure no group of students is being monitored by a teacher or administrator whose opinion of said student could be impacted by anything the student might reveal to a friend (or even another teacher) during a supposedly private chat.
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Via: PBS Frontline | News Archive
| Tags:
Notebook,
Privacy,
Lower Merion,
laptop monitoring,
IS 339,
Dan Ackerman,
in loco parentis
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Repeat after me: "That could never happen around here." No, smile more when you say it. |
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"Why we would NEVER do that!" |
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The adage, "children should be seen and not heard," does not apply here. |
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The school should just send home a waiver stating that they can turn the webcam on at any time as a stipulation of them using the laptop. I understand that it could be misused. But as long as the student is aware they are being watch while it happens, and aware that they can be watched at any given time. This should encourage them not to be doing anything inappropriate while using the computer. If you don't want to give up certain rights to your privacy, then don't accept the laptop and get your own. |
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wow really? lol they can monitor whats on their screen and mess with them xD. and to think i wanted the school to give me a laptop to use for school -.- |
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I agree with acarzt. School provided laptop, sign an agreement when you get it and have it made clear they can utilize their webcam when they like. |
I know that legally, a child cannot sign/enter into a contract alone unless a parent also signs, and it's also unclear whether a Parent has the right to sign away a child's right to privacy either. My gut feeling is that the school has no right or reason to activate a visual aid and monitor a child when the child is at home, or even away from school. Especially without anyone knowing when it's happening. A school is responsible for a kid when they are at school, when they are on the way there, and when they are on the way home. At these times, they hold the ultimate responsibility for that child, and they should be able to visually monitor him/her at will. After a kid gets home, the rights of the school should take second fiddle to the right to privacy that is written into our constitution. If I were those kids, I would tape over the friggin' camera and tell them to kiss my hind end. If it were my child having to deal with this problem, I would 'FIX IT FOREVER' with a drop of JB-Weld right in the center of the lens.
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I think it's great. Sales of my "feed video loop of student assiduously working to the webcam" application (FVLOSAWTTW.exe) have been moribund, but I expect them to pick up shortly. |
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lol Clem thats a good one. I personally know schools specifically in Cobb County where I helped integrate some laptops for Dell. Of course this was a few years ago, but as far as I know the webcams were not even activated, if I recall correctly we disabled them from the Bios. |