Some
parents said they knew this was happening when students took the NAEP tests,
which asks for background information about the family.
They
named a government warehouse in Maryland where these records were presumably
kept.
The letters were routed to me because the NAEP program was part of the
agency I headed, the Office of Educational Research and Improvement.
I
responded politely to every such letter that no personally identifiable
information was retained. I didn’t take their fears seriously because they
weren’t true.
That
was then. This is now. All their worst fears have come true, and then some.
The
government is collecting copious amounts of data about every child. In the
past, this data collection would have been illegal, but the Department of
Education weakened the federal privacy law in 2012 to allow the collection of
personally identifiable data.
Every
state has received funding for a longitudinal data base. The Gates Foundation
has given out millions to encourage data collection.
Big
Data is here. The question is why. For what purposes? Shouldn’t parents be
asked for their approval? How could this happen without Congressional hearings
and oversight?
It
is not too late. Congress should call hearings to inquire about systematic
invasions of privacy, about covert loosening of FERPA regulations, and to find
out why the law was weakened without seeking Congressional approval.