TY - GEN
T1 - Teachers’ Perspective on the Implementation of GDPR in Schools – A Design-Oriented Case Study
AU - Marchetti, Emanuela
AU - Valente, Andrea
AU - Witfelt, Claus
AU - Amo-Filva, Daniel
AU - Garcia-Holgado, Alicia
AU - Garcia-Holgado, Lucia
AU - Vidotto, Elisabetta
AU - Garzotto, Maria Elena
AU - García-Peñalvo, Francisco José
AU - Escudero, David Fonseca
AU - Orehovacki, Tihomir
AU - Krasna, Marjan
AU - Pesek, Igor
AU - Ruzic, Ivana
AU - Fraoua, Karim Elia
AU - Moreira, Fernando
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In this paper, we are interested in investigating how the introduction of GDPR has affected the teachers, with respect to how the new rules have altered their practices, which issues or challenges they have experienced, and which strategies they have developed to overcome such issues. Proceeding from an ecological perspective, we look at schools as complex ecologies, in which every change, happening at various scales and involvement levels, affects each actor in specific ways and at different degrees, altering their practices and mutual relations. Activity theory is also used, as a critical lens to look at teachers’ practices that have been disrupted by the increasing digitalization of schools. In our data collection, we adopted a user-centered design methodology, supported by ethnomethodology and co-design workshops in situ and online. According to our data teachers are experiencing pressure with respect to three main aspects: educating themselves and their students about GDPR and use of Social Media (SoMe) platforms, which are designed to facilitate data sharing on a global scale; how to handle students’ data avoiding leaks or potential conflicts, and finally the expansion of the boundaries of the school ecology. This last aspect appears of critical relevance, as the increasing digitalization of education and the spread use of SoMe platforms, has compromised the locality of the school as an ecology, leading to increasing uncertainty and lack of overview on the actions undertaken by its actors.
AB - In this paper, we are interested in investigating how the introduction of GDPR has affected the teachers, with respect to how the new rules have altered their practices, which issues or challenges they have experienced, and which strategies they have developed to overcome such issues. Proceeding from an ecological perspective, we look at schools as complex ecologies, in which every change, happening at various scales and involvement levels, affects each actor in specific ways and at different degrees, altering their practices and mutual relations. Activity theory is also used, as a critical lens to look at teachers’ practices that have been disrupted by the increasing digitalization of schools. In our data collection, we adopted a user-centered design methodology, supported by ethnomethodology and co-design workshops in situ and online. According to our data teachers are experiencing pressure with respect to three main aspects: educating themselves and their students about GDPR and use of Social Media (SoMe) platforms, which are designed to facilitate data sharing on a global scale; how to handle students’ data avoiding leaks or potential conflicts, and finally the expansion of the boundaries of the school ecology. This last aspect appears of critical relevance, as the increasing digitalization of education and the spread use of SoMe platforms, has compromised the locality of the school as an ecology, leading to increasing uncertainty and lack of overview on the actions undertaken by its actors.
KW - GDPR
KW - School Ecology
KW - Teaching
KW - User-Centered Design
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-61685-3_14
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-61685-3_14
M3 - Article in proceedings
AN - SCOPUS:85196149196
SN - 9783031616846
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science
SP - 182
EP - 199
BT - Learning and Collaboration Technologies
A2 - Zaphiris, Panayiotis
A2 - Ioannou, Andri
A2 - Ioannou, Andri
PB - Springer
T2 - 11th International Conference on Learning and Collaboration Technologies, LCT 2024, held as part of the 26th HCI International Conference, HCII 2024
Y2 - 29 June 2024 through 4 July 2024
ER -