Compulsory technology adoption and adaptation in education: A looming student privacy problem

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Abstract

Educational settings worldwide have a significant impact on the early use of digital devices and online media by children. Therefore, schools' educational technology (EdTech) adoption decisions may lead to long-term repercussions for students and society. The authors explore how schools make technology decisions on behalf of their students, focusing on the ways that privacy and data security are considered in technology adoption decisions and use. Adaptation-level theory helps to illustrate the growing dependence on technology in compulsory educational settings, the convenience of adopting digital tools, and the risks to children that result as they use and adapt to technology. Analysis of in-depth interviews and text analysis of public state reports indicate that confusion between information technology and EdTech consequentially leads to a “privacy-security chasm.” Findings highlight privacy-security challenges in K-12 school districts and the growing need to understand student privacy protection as part of children's digital well-being.

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APA

Walker, K. L., Bodendorf, K., Kiesler, T., de Mattos, G., Rostom, M., & Elkordy, A. (2023). Compulsory technology adoption and adaptation in education: A looming student privacy problem. Journal of Consumer Affairs, 57(1), 445–478. https://doi.org/10.1111/joca.12506

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