Universities and libraries are increasingly moving to use the data streams created by their constituents in order to provide the best services and resources possible, but the use of this information challenges long-held principles with regard to privacy, confidentiality, informed consent, and other values. This presentation examines the role of libraries as producers and consumers of educational analytics, and proposes a framework of principles and best practices for the stewardship of these data throughout their lifecycle.
Analytics and Privacy: A Proposed Framework for Negotiating Service and Value Boundaries was presented at CNI's December 2014 member meeting by Lisa Hinchliffe of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Andrew Asher of Indiana University.Video of the presentation is now available online:
Previously-released videos from this meeting: -Swords, Dragons, and Spells: Libraries and User Privacy, Peter Brantley (NYPL), Marshall Breeding (consultant), Eric Hellman (Glejar), and Gary Price ( infoDOCKET.com)
- The Linked Data For Libraries (LD4L) Project: A Progress Report, with Dean Krafft (Cornell), and Tom Cramer (Stanford) http://youtu.be/QYd_OlenZ5U-A Conversation on the Changing Landscape of Information Systems in Higher Education, with Clifford Lynch (CNI), James Hilton (U. Michigan), Michele Kimpton (DuraSpace), and Tom Cramer (Stanford) -An Evolving Environment: Privacy, Security, Migration and Stewardship (Clifford Lynch, CNI)
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