TY - JOUR
T1 - Data justice in education
T2 - Toward a research agenda
AU - Pangrazio, Luci
AU - Auld, Glenn
AU - Lynch, Julianne
AU - Sawatzki, Carly
AU - Duffy, Gavin
AU - Hannigan, Shelley
AU - O’Mara, Jo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Educational institutions increasingly rely on digital platforms to deliver content and learning, monitor attendance, communicate with stakeholders, and evaluate institutional performance. Despite the efficiency and accessibility gains they offer, digital platforms are powered by personal data which, through a process of datafication, can be used to track, monitor, and profile staff and students. The insights drawn from this data can be used to shape educational and professional futures. This article examines how datafication has become a social justice issue in education, discussing the implications for well-being, decision-making, governance, and power in education. Using Hintz and colleagues framework for data justice, it applies and explores the three dimensions of data justice to the context of education, including: (1) infrastructures (2) regulation, and (3) informed and knowledgeable stakeholders. The paper discusses the unique challenges to achieving data justice in education and concludes by outlining the key questions for a future research agenda.
AB - Educational institutions increasingly rely on digital platforms to deliver content and learning, monitor attendance, communicate with stakeholders, and evaluate institutional performance. Despite the efficiency and accessibility gains they offer, digital platforms are powered by personal data which, through a process of datafication, can be used to track, monitor, and profile staff and students. The insights drawn from this data can be used to shape educational and professional futures. This article examines how datafication has become a social justice issue in education, discussing the implications for well-being, decision-making, governance, and power in education. Using Hintz and colleagues framework for data justice, it applies and explores the three dimensions of data justice to the context of education, including: (1) infrastructures (2) regulation, and (3) informed and knowledgeable stakeholders. The paper discusses the unique challenges to achieving data justice in education and concludes by outlining the key questions for a future research agenda.
KW - Data justice
KW - datafication
KW - digital platforms
KW - education
KW - infrastructures
KW - practices
KW - privacy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85186591449
U2 - 10.1080/00131857.2024.2320196
DO - 10.1080/00131857.2024.2320196
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85186591449
SN - 0013-1857
JO - Educational Philosophy and Theory
JF - Educational Philosophy and Theory
ER -