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Parental Use of Grade-tracking Apps Causing “a lot of yelling and screaming at the kids” and “the creation of too-dependent teens”

7-11-2023 < Activist Post 23 566 words
 

By B.N. Frank


Earlier this year, a study revealed that most people don’t understand the privacy risks associated with downloading and using apps.  That aside, schools providing parents with apps to track their kids’ grades may be causing more harm than good.


From Newser:




The Downside of Grade-Tracking Apps


The Cut explores how parents can get too obsessed


By John Johnson, Newser Staff






Most public and private high schools these days use some version of learning-management software, tech that allows parents to check on their children’s grades and whether they’re keeping up with their schoolwork in general. The principle behind popular ones like Schoology is straightforward enough—”research has long tied family engagement in schools to better outcomes for students,” writes Gail Cornwall at The Cut. But her look at the issue focuses on the downside, when parents become obsessed with the push notifications notifying them that an assignment is late or their child’s GPA has dropped. “There’s a lot of yelling and screaming at the kids,” says New York City psychiatrist Dr. Jodi Gold. “‘Why didn’t you turn in this math homework, this Spanish homework?'”


School World Order: The Technocratic Globalization of Corporatized Education


It can be a nightmare for the students, their teachers, and even the parents themselves, who can’t quite navigate when it’s appropriate to step in. Worst case, it can shift the focus away from actual learning. “It used to be that during parent-teacher conferences, I would tell parents how interested their child seemed in the class and how they were working with others,” one longtime teacher tells Cornwall. “Post-online grade books, it became a very pointed conversation over a spreadsheet.” Another danger is the creation of too-dependent teens. “I have many, many super-high-functioning young adults starting college, and they literally can’t place a Starbucks order without texting their moms,” says Gold. Read the full story, which includes the view of parents as well. As one sums it up: “Do I trust the app? Do I trust my kid?” (Or check out other Longforms.)








Activist Post reports regularly about privacy-invasive and unsafe technologies.  For more information, visit our archives.


Image: Pixabay


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