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Research Article

The human labour of school data: exploring the production of digital data in schools

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Pages 353-368 | Published online: 24 Nov 2020
 

ABSTRACT

The past 20 years have seen the steady ‘datafication’ of school systems – i.e. the rendering of key aspects of school practice into data that is digitally collected, processed and circulated. In contrast to assumptions of ‘data-driven’ schools as sites of more efficient and automated forms of data work, this paper examines the extensive human labour that now supports data production within schools. Drawing on in-depth interview data generated within three Australian secondary schools, the paper explores three distinct stages of data production involving the increased labour of teachers, school leaders, administrative and technical staff, parents and students. These findings highlight how the production of digital data within schools is associated with heightened levels of human labour – from formally recognised activities to less visible infrastructural maintenance and ‘repair’ work. The paper concludes by discussing how ‘school data’ corresponds with broader tensions relating to school working conditions, occupational cultures, employment relations and worker organisation. Rather than being a source of more efficient and machine-led work with data, the increased prevalence of digital data seems to perpetuate some of the less desirable features of schools as workplaces.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Australian Research Council [DP190102286].

Notes on contributors

Neil Selwyn

Neil Selwyn is a Distinguished Research Professor at the Faculty of Education, Monash University. His research and teaching focus on the place of digital media in everyday life, and the sociology of technology (non)use in educational settings. Neil is the author of Should Robots Replace Teachers? AI and the Future of Education, (Polity 2019), and What Is Digital Sociology? (Polity, 2019). [email protected]

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