TY - JOUR
T1 - The power of the norm
T2 - how schools interpret, use and disclose education data
AU - Pangrazio, Luci
AU - Duffy, Gavin
AU - Zomer, Chris
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - While education data is frequently collected and used in schools, critical edtech research has revealed a range of issues and harms for individuals and institutions. In this article, the authors investigate how school administrators, teachers, parents and students understand the collection, use and disclosure of school data. They foreground data justice to reveal systemic issues in Australian education, revealing a complex picture of how school data is experienced that belies the more straightforward discourse that it leads to improved learning outcomes. The authors discuss three main stumbling blocks for schools in the quest for data justice: the increasing use of standardised data and the power of the norm in assessing learning;wellbeing and teacher performance; a lack of informed and knowledgeable stakeholders; and disparities in data infrastructures that are determined by school budgets. They conclude the article by making practical suggestions to advance data justice in Australian schools.
AB - While education data is frequently collected and used in schools, critical edtech research has revealed a range of issues and harms for individuals and institutions. In this article, the authors investigate how school administrators, teachers, parents and students understand the collection, use and disclosure of school data. They foreground data justice to reveal systemic issues in Australian education, revealing a complex picture of how school data is experienced that belies the more straightforward discourse that it leads to improved learning outcomes. The authors discuss three main stumbling blocks for schools in the quest for data justice: the increasing use of standardised data and the power of the norm in assessing learning;wellbeing and teacher performance; a lack of informed and knowledgeable stakeholders; and disparities in data infrastructures that are determined by school budgets. They conclude the article by making practical suggestions to advance data justice in Australian schools.
KW - accountability
KW - data infrastructures
KW - Data justice
KW - datafication of education
KW - standardised testing
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105022686087
U2 - 10.1080/0305764X.2025.2590450
DO - 10.1080/0305764X.2025.2590450
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105022686087
SN - 0305-764X
JO - Cambridge Journal of Education
JF - Cambridge Journal of Education
ER -