The Wall Street Journal - 06.03.2020

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R10| Friday, March 6, 2020 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


JOURNAL REPORT|WORKPLACE TECHNOLOGY


O


n campuses around the country
today, college students are
watched, tracked and managed
by a growing concentration of
technologies.
Universities are recording students’ faces
with video surveillance cameras, tracking
their movements with GPS and monitoring
their messages on social media and email.
They are detailing students’ study habits
through digital textbooks, recording when
they enter buildings, logging their presence
in class, the library and even the football
game. All of these relatively new tracking
technologies are in addition to years-old sys-
tems that leverage students’ IDs to monitor
how frequently individuals are entering
gyms, dorms and cafeterias.
The interlocking layers of observation are
typically used to help keep students safe, en-
gaged and moving efficiently toward gradua-
tion. Some, for example, help schools figure out
in real time who is showing up for class and
who is at risk of slipping through the cracks.
But what may be intended as protection
can take away some of the freedom college
students traditionally have enjoyed as they
take on new responsibilities and test bound-
aries. Privacy advocates also worry about
colleges having too much power. None of
these tracking technologies is unusual, but
because so many are brought to bear in such
a concentrated fashion, the overall impact is
unsettling to some people.
“In most other settings, the collection of
information about the population may be dif-
fused across many different entities,” says
Adam Schwartz, a senior attorney at the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a California-
based nonprofit that advocates for privacy
rights and free speech. “The supermarket
knows what the customer eats. The bookstore

BYDOUGLASBELKIN

On College


Campuses,


No Place to


Hide for


Students


Increasingly, schools are using
technology to keep tabs on where
students are and how they’re doing

knows what the customer reads. The
police know what faces appeared near
what police surveillance cameras. But
on a college campus, the college is the
supermarket, the bookstore and the
police department.”
Here is a look at some of the moni-
toring equipment that is now in use at
campuses across the country.

On campus—and online
Colleges begin to track prospective
students before they even enroll. By mea-
suring how much time applicants spend
on their school websites, admissions offi-
cers gauge how interested a student is in
attending. Students who show more in-
terest are more likely to get accepted.
Once a student is enrolled, ID cards
leave traces at cash registers and en-
trances to dorms, gyms and cafeterias.
That data can be tracked to observe
habits and even friend groups. When a
student logs onto a school’s computer
system, administrators can follow them
across the Web observing which pages
they browse, says Alan Rubel, a profes-
sor at the University of Wisconsin-Mad-
ison Information School.
Tech companies pitch new ways to
track students all the time, Prof. Rubel
says. Last year he reviewed a pitch from
a company that wanted to access the
cameras and microphones of every stu-
dent’s mobile phone in case of an emer-
gency like a mass shooting, he says. The
devices would act like a hive, collecting
and feeding information to a central au-
thority which could then direct students
away fromdanger.
It is now common for colleges to be
able to locate students through their
phones, with scores of schools hiring
companies to monitor everywhere stu-
dents go on campus. These schools
want to know whether students are
showing up to class, studying in the li-
brary or hanging out on the quad.
In a pilot program for the California
State University system, Sacramento
State University this semester gave first-
year students the option to connect
through their phones to a program that
tracks where they go. The program, pro-
vided by Degree Analytics, can be set up
to flag patterns in an individual’s behavior
that might increase their risk of dropping
out. Of the school’s 3,800 first-year stu-
dents, about 500 agreed to participate.

In the classroom
Another fast-growing technology
is sensors that check attendance by

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connecting with the Bluetooth signals
on students’ phones when they arrive in
classrooms. Some 37 schools have con-
tracted with one provider of sensors,
SpotterEDU. Company co-founder Rick
Carter, a former college-basketball
coach, says his inspiration for the ser-
vice came from having to make sure his
players attended class so they would be
eligible to play in games.
The University of Mississippi is pay-
ing $10,000 a year to SpotterEDU for its
sensors to track the attendance of 150
student athletes. Bob Baker, the senior
athletic director in charge of making
sure athletes graduate, says his depart-
ment used to send students to individ-
ual classrooms to check up on players.
Now the app generates a report for
each student. If a student is not in class,
the app records them as absent and
doesn’t know where the student is. It
sends an email to his or her academic
counselor, who reaches out to the stu-
dent to find out why they were absent
or tardy, says Mr. Baker.

At sports events
About 40 colleges are using an
app called FanMaker toboost student
attendance at sports events. Sensors in
the student-seating sections detect not
only when students with the app are at
the game, but how long they stay.
Such information can be valuable for
universities with big athletic programs. If
few students attend a nationally televised
game, or leave at halftime, the school
looks less attractive to prospective stu-
dents. In return for filling seats at such
games, students who use the optional
app can get rewards such as tickets to
more important games.

In smartbooks and
portals
Web-connected smartbooks and portals
through which students access classes
and communicate with their schools are
helping professors monitor student per-
formance in real time. Learning-manage-
ment systems and other such tools pro-
vide a kind of dashboard instructors can
use to see how much reading their stu-
dents have done. Such information can
alert faculty and academic advisers well
before the end of a semester if a stu-
dent is in danger of flunking a class.
Some observers worry that academic
advisers using such tools could be too
quick to counsel a student struggling
early in a class to take a less ambitious
academic path, before the student has a

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chance to fix the problem.
“There is all sorts of pressure to grad-
uate students, which is generally good,”
says Brett McFarlane, an associate direc-
tor at the National Academic Advising
Association, which advocates for aca-
demic advisers. “The problem comes
when a decision is based not on the stu-
dent but on what the institution is being
rewarded for. That is when you can start
to get dysfunctional behavior.”

On social media
Several companies have developed
algorithms to monitor social-media feeds
in and around a school for signs that a
student may be a danger to themselves
or someone else. If language is identified
that meets certain criteria, the company
sends the school a notification that in-
cludes the post itself, and it’s up to the
school to interpret the message.
The University of Virginiauses a
company called Dataminr, forwhich it
pays $19,000 a year, according to UVA
Police Sgt. Benjamin Rexrode. Dataminr
scours social media to alert campus po-
lice if an emergency is unfolding and it is
being reported on social media.

In public spaces
Campus surveillance cameras are
now widespread. PurdueUniversity in
West Lafayette,Ind., has about 500 cam-
eras around campus. The campus police
monitor 300 of them, mostly in parking
garages and outside spaces. Cameras are
in dorms, academic buildings and other
locations as well. Images are stored for
45 says, campus police say.
When theUniversity of California,
Los Angeles in 2018 considered pairing
AI-enhanced facial-recognition technology
with its campus surveillance cameras,
students protested with town hall meet-
ings and a letter-writing campaign.
“People were really worried about
what would happen to these images.
Who would store them? Who would have
the legal right to them?” says UCLA se-
nior Salvador Martinez, who helped orga-
nize the pushback.
Last month, the administrative vice
chancellor at UCLA, Michael Beck, an-
nounced that the school would drop the
effort. “We have determined that the po-
tential benefits are limited and vastly
outweighed by the concerns of our cam-
pus community,” he said.

Mr. Belkinis a Wall Street Journal
reporter in Chicago. He can be
reached [email protected]. PETER OUMANSKI

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