Youth responses to the surveillance school: The bifurcation of antagonism and confidence in surveillance among teenaged students
Date
2018-11-30
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Abstract
The recent rise of so-called ‘surveillance schools’ is often justified given the need to engender a safe and secure educational environment for students; a fusion of pedagogical and security motives. This paper contributes knowledge regarding the attitudes and lived experiences of teenagers in response to school-based surveillance. Focus groups centre discussions on two areas: the effectiveness of policies regarding technology in the classroom as well as school-wide restrictions on Wi-Fi access, and the effectiveness of surveillance technologies geared to actively monitor student online activities. We explore a bifurcation of attitudes revealing both resistance to surveillance school practices as well as strong support for monitoring technologies perceived to be effective in addressing cyber-risks such as cyberbullying. Our findings point to the need for empirically assessing contexts where support or antagonism towards surveillance occurs, suggesting neither isomorphic resistance nor wholescale acquiescence.
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Keywords
youth, resistance, school surveillance, privacy, social network sites, teachers
Citation
Adorjan, M., & Ricciardelli, R. (2018). Youth responses to the surveillance school: The bifurcation of antagonism and confidence in surveillance among teenaged students. "Young", 1-49.