Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Learning Analytics

869

Citations

33

References

2013

Year

TLDR

Learning analytics can enhance higher‑education institutions’ understanding of student needs and improve learning outcomes, yet data collection raises ethical concerns such as privacy, consent, and data interpretation. The article advocates a sociocritical perspective on learning analytics to address its ethical implications. It emphasizes power dynamics, surveillance, transparency, and the fluid nature of student identity, and introduces six guiding principles for ethical practice.

Abstract

The field of learning analytics has the potential to enable higher education institutions to increase their understanding of their students’ learning needs and to use that understanding to positively influence student learning and progression. Analysis of data relating to students and their engagement with their learning is the foundation of this process. There is an inherent assumption linked to learning analytics that knowledge of a learner’s behavior is advantageous for the individual, instructor, and educational provider. It seems intuitively obvious that a greater understanding of a student cohort and the learning designs and interventions they best respond to would benefit students and, in turn, the institution’s retention and success rate. Yet collection of data and their use face a number of ethical challenges, including location and interpretation of data; informed consent, privacy, and deidentification of data; and classification and management of data. Approaches taken to understand the opportunities and ethical challenges of learning analytics necessarily depend on many ideological assumptions and epistemologies. This article proposes a sociocritical perspective on the use of learning analytics. Such an approach highlights the role of power, the impact of surveillance, the need for transparency, and an acknowledgment that student identity is a transient, temporal, and context-bound construct. Each of these affects the scope and definition of learning analytics’ ethical use. We propose six principles as a framework for considerations to guide higher education institutions to address ethical issues in learning analytics and challenges in context-dependent and appropriate ways.

References

YearCitations

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