
The Chris Hedges Report
Surveillance Education (w/ Nolan Higdon & Allison Butler) | The Chris Hedges Report
Nov 20, 2024
Nolan Higdon and Allison Butler, co-authors of "Surveillance Education," delve into the alarming reality of surveillance technologies in schools. They highlight how tools designed for safety often infringe on student privacy and disproportionately affect marginalized groups. Higdon discusses the idea of treating students as data points within a surveillance capitalist framework. Butler underscores the lack of consent students face, revealing the darkness behind the tech marketed for educational purposes. Their insights raise critical questions about privacy rights and the ethics of modern education.
49:00
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Quick takeaways
- Surveillance technologies in education, while marketed as safety enhancements, erode student privacy and contribute to systemic discrimination against marginalized groups.
- The algorithms driving these surveillance tools often perpetuate societal biases, leading to disproportionate monitoring and harmful consequences for students of color.
Deep dives
The Ubiquity of Surveillance in Education
Surveillance tools have become prevalent in educational settings, with companies like Gaggle, Securely, and Bark collecting extensive data on students. While these technologies are marketed as enhancements for safety and academic performance, they often fall short of delivering their promised benefits. Instead, they undermine student privacy, particularly in low-income communities where oversight is minimal. As a result, these tools not only monitor but can also stigmatize and criminalize students, reinforcing negative biases against already marginalized groups.
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