Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Georgia Tech Invokes FERPA, Cripples School’s Wikis - Audrey Watters, Hack Education

FERPA is meant to give students control over access to and disclosure of their educational records. This prevents schools from divulging information about a student’s grades, behavior or school work to anyone other than the student without that student’s consent (with some exceptions, such as to parties involved with student aid or to schools to which students are transferring). The classic example used to explain how FERPA works: you can’t post a list of students’ names and grades on a bulletin board in the hallway. But what about posting students’ work publicly online? Although it’s up to the U.S. Department of Education to enforce FERPA compliance, there’s news from Georgia Tech today that the school has made a decision to interpret FERPA as prohibiting just this sort of thing. Georgia Tech deleted all student history and participation from the school’s “Swikis,” the wikis that students use for their coursework. Georgia Tech has been using wikis for this purpose since 1997, pioneering the usage of the collaborative tools for undergraduate education.