Schools Are Normalizing Intrusive Surveillance
Kids will grow up to value freedom only if they’re raised in an environment where it’s treated as good.

If war is the health of the state, as Randolph Bourne had it, then scaring the hell out of people is the health of the security state. Nothing scares people more than threats to wee ones, which is why "think of the children" is the go-to marketing hook for control-freak policies. And if children are involved in authoritarian schemes, you know that implicates public schools, which are the focus of a new report on surveillance and kids by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.
Surveillance Inside the Schoolhouse
"Over the last two decades, a segment of the educational technology (EdTech) sector that markets student surveillance products to schools — the EdTech Surveillance industry — has grown into a $3.1 billion a year economic juggernaut with a projected 8% annual growth rate," begins Digital Dystopia The Danger in Buying What the EdTech Surveillance Industry is Selling. "The EdTech Surveillance industry accomplished that feat by playing on school districts' fears of school shootings, student self-harm and suicides, and bullying — marketing them as common, ever-present threats."
This being the modern ACLU, the report's focus is not on decisions made by authoritarian school administrators, but on the companies that sell those administrators tools that help them implement authoritarianism. It's difficult to believe vendors of snooping tools would exist without demand for their products, but the report assumes the EdTech sector beguiles naive administrators with "biased marketing materials" that focus "on stoking fear around student self-harm, suicides, and bullying."
Sure.
That said, the report offers valuable insight into surveillance in American public schools. It also examines the damaging environment surveillance creates for the kids subject to pervasive monitoring.
Big Hallway Monitor is Watching
As the authors detail, among the technologies are surveillance cameras. These are often linked to software for facial recognition, access control, behavior analysis, and weapon detection. That is, cameras scan student faces and then algorithms identify them, allow or deny them entry based on that ID, decide if their activities are threatening, and determine if objects they carry may be dangerous or forbidden.
"False hits, such as mistaking a broomstick, three-ring binder, or a Google Chromebook laptop for a gun or other type of weapon, could result in an armed police response to a school," cautions the report.
That's not a random assortment of harmless-until-misidentified items; a footnoted 2022 Charlotte Observer piece points out such objects were tagged as weapons by scanners in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. "A how-to video posted earlier this year by administrators at Butler High School instructs students to remove certain belongings from their backpacks — and walk through the scanner holding their laptops above their heads — to avoid setting off a false alarm," it adds.
Huh. What happens if behavior analysis algorithms decide that brandished laptops are threatening?
Also called out is software that monitors social media, students' communications, and web-surfing habits. Audio monitors that are supposed to detect gunshots—but can be triggered by slammed doors (as at Greenwood High School in Arkansas earlier this year)—also feature in many schools.
The ACLU also points out something I wrote up last year: Public-health panic during the COVID-19 pandemic supercharged what was already a creeping culture of surveillance in public schools.
"Because of the emergency shift to remote learning, the use of remote learning technologies (quite a few of which were sold by rebranded student surveillance companies) went from a limited to near total market penetration within a matter of weeks," notes the report. "Despite warnings, the pressing need to educate America's students despite the loss of in-person instruction left little time to consider the long-term impact of adopting these remote-learning but also student surveillance tools."
Does Big Hallway Monitor at least make kids safer?
"The creation and implementation of technologies for watching and policies for monitoring and control are premised on the notion that they achieve their intended purposes: improved learning outcomes and student safety," University of North Carolina law professor Barbara Fedders commented in a 2019 law review article on the effects of school surveillance. "However, for many of these technologies, the evidence of efficacy is scant; others have not been tested at all."
Kids Learn Reading, Writing, and Scrutiny
That's not to say surveillance has no impact. Students are aware that they're being observed. Of students aged 14–18 surveyed by the ACLU, 62 percent saw video cameras in their schools (the U.S. Department of Education says cameras are used by 91 percent of public schools), and 49 percent reported monitoring software. Understandably, this affects their behavior. Thirty-two percent say, "I always feel like I'm being watched," and 26 percent fret over what their "school and the companies they contract with do with the data."
"Research demonstrates the damaging effect of surveillance on children's ability to develop in healthy ways," Fedders added. "Pervasive surveillance can create a climate in which adults are seen as overestimating and overreacting to risk. Children, in turn, cannot develop the ability to evaluate and manage risk themselves in order to function effectively."
Notably, school surveillance normalizes the idea that constant monitoring is good and necessary for preserving safety.
"Americans under the age of 30 stand out when it comes to 1984‐style in‐home government surveillance cameras. 3 in 10 (29 percent) Americans under 30 favor 'the government installing surveillance cameras in every household' in order to 'reduce domestic violence, abuse, and other illegal activity,'" the Cato Institute's Emily Ekins and Jordan Gygi wrote in June of survey results. "Support declines with age, dropping to 20 percent among 30–44 year olds and dropping considerably to 6 percent among those over the age of 45."
In fact, support for a heavy authoritarian hand overall is gaining ground with young Americans. A survey of college students by the Foundation for Individuals Rights and Expression (FIRE) found "forty-five percent said blocking other students from attending a speech may be acceptable in some situations."
"We may well learn what happens when a nation founded on liberty rejects liberty," FIRE executive vice president Nic Perrino warns of such results.
If young Americans ultimately reject liberty, it may result from trapping them in miniature surveillance states that defy every premise of a free society. Kids will grow up to value freedom only if they're raised in an environment where privacy and liberty are treated as normal and good.
While we wait for public schools to change, you may want to consider the myriad of options, from private school to homeschooling, that let you tailor your kids' education and environment.
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1984 should be mandatory reading.
It already is. The problem is that far too many are taking it as a playbook rather than a warning.
https://thefederalist.com/2023/10/06/hillary-clinton-wants-trump-voters-to-undergo-a-formal-deprogramming/
Intrusive surveillance is necessary to protect students from the results of 50 years of Libertarian social policies.
Everything Libertarians touch turns to crap.
What the hell are you babbling about? Not that I expect you to make sense, but this is dumber than usual even for you. Looking back over the last fifty years, I'm straining to see these alleged libertarian social policies.
Kids will grow up to value freedom only if they’re raised in an environment where it’s treated as good.
Uh, if you think this generation values hallway monitors any more than the last generation, you'd be mistaken.
True enough (I think). The fact is, American public schools have never been designed to value freedom, or to teach students to do so on in their own lives.
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All stuff I've been saying for about 30 years. Glad to see that someone else is finally waking up. Too bad it's probably too late to save the concept of a republic of free, self-reliant individuals.
The simple fact is that 'we' cannot force people to be free, but 'they' can force people to be slaves.
In the long run, 'they' will win.
Your nuance is pretty close to my meaning; if freedom is the natural state, it is best nurtured by allowing children to grow up without the constant monitoring and supervision.
The good news is, freedom will arise spontaneously in every health person, but the bad news is, like a flame, it can so easily be extinguished while it is still a tiny spark. And "they" are very good at seeking out those sparks.
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Free, self-reliant people use security cameras, I assure you.
They are not normalizing; rather, they are just helping to record and document the fall of Western Civilization. '...Incoming! (chair being hurled at teacher smashing her to the ground.....')
They are also normalizing rape, fighting, indoctrination, dei, communism, activism...
Don’t be silly.
we. don't. need. no. thought. control.
Wrongthink detected; please report to HR.
(or else)
Not just schools.
When was the last time you or anyone you know work for a company that did not require a picture id hanging around their neck? One of the best businesses to be in is supplying corporate id stuff like badges, lanyards, car decals and the like.
100%. Selling security is not even remotely a statist invention. Our brains (limbic system) are wired to elevate 'seeking security' to a life-and-death imperative/motivation. Once we have knowledge of that - and knowledge of how to tap that (often via subconscious triggers), then it's only a matter of time before it becomes very profitable to manipulate people into distorting their own decisions toward that.
No surprise - those individuals who are naturally sociopaths, tend to quickly gravitate towards those occupations where such manipulative tendencies are highly rewarded and away from those occupations where such tendencies are not rewarded.
Occupations with the highest % of sociopaths:
CEO/Mgmt, Lawyer, Mass media, sales/marketing, surgeon, journalist, cop, clergy, chef, bureaucrat
Occupations with the lowest % of sociopaths:
Care aide, nurse, therapist, craftsman, beautician, charity worker, teacher, artist, doctor (meaning GP), accountant
I need a citation that puts teachers in the low sociopath group if "manipulative tendencies are highly rewarded and away from those occupations where such tendencies are not rewarded" is part of the definition.
A psychologist named Kevin Dutton wrote a book on this stuff and specifically identified occupations as the result of a survey. And part of it's a wiki page now.
And if you want to take that survey, it's here
Well, and Kevin Dutton is full of it. As are you.
“Kevin Dutton is full of it.” Wonderful, sophisticated argument, NOYB2. You’re a credit to the Reason community. What’s next: “I know you are but what am I?”
I’m sorry, Kent, but you are apparently incapable of distinguishing an opinion from an argument. Try to work on that.
You will find that I sometimes state opinions and sometimes make arguments.
Here is another opinion: you are full of it, too, and you are likely a sock.
I suspect the sociopaths are drawn more towards administration than teaching.
The term "psychopath" implies a value judgment, namely that there is something abnormal or pathological about these people. Obviously, there is not. People with these behavioral traits are widespread throughout society and essential for a functioning human society.
That's possibly the stupidest thing I've ever read from you. Psychopaths are absolutely abnormal. The fact that some do well in life in spite of their deformity does not mean they aren't abnormal.
The term "abnormal" usually means "different from the norm in an undesirable or problematic way". You know this full well (since you refer to their "deformity"), yet you are equivocating.
The fact remains: while psychopaths differ from "the norm", they do so in a way that is a normal and expected variation of human psychology.
In fact, almost every human differs from the norm since almost no human conforms to what is considered "normal" physiology and "normal" psychology.
More ?blessings? of Commie-Education.
What a wrong headed bullshit opinion piece this is.
If the thesis of this were true, there would be no dissent in totalitarian regimes.
BYODB— You should try actually formulating a coherent argument.
Schools have become the indoctrination wing of the globalist regime.
"Become" implies a change. They were never anything else.
Western civilization is coming to an end.
Quit making lame and false excuses for the government school system. They want that degree of control and intrusiveness; they are narcissist Marxists.
control and intrusiveness are what all Marxists want.
“control and intrusiveness are what all Marxists want”
Your name-calling aside (SMH at calling them “Marxists” – they’re a lot of things, but not Marxists – your ignorance of Marx and Marxism clearly shows here), I do want to point out that control and intrusiveness are what all *politicians* and *bureaucrats* want, no matter what political persuasion. Right-wingers want just as much control and intrusiveness in our lives as the left-wing. There are even a few mis-guided so-called libertarians who demonstrate that they really aren’t libertarian at all, by claiming “If we have to pay for government schools, I want to spend even MORE money on them by having a surveillance system installed in every room of the building so we can see how the 'Marxists' are indoctrinating our kids".
(Gawd forbid those right-wingers "home-school" kids and indoctrinate them into hating anyone who isn't straight and white)
Davulek— You need to try and hone your intellect, not to mention your writing. You don’t need to say “lame and false,” it’s redundant. Likewise, governmental control implies intrusiveness, so again it’s redundant. I won’t even get into “narcissist Marxist,” which is just comical and nothing to the point. You might want to take a class in Logic & Rhetoric, so that you might rise up to the high standards set by the Reason website.
Y'all do know that "algorithms" are created and programmed by humans, right?
These algorithms do what they do because a human programmed it to do that.
What's that? The ALGORITHM won't let you post that on YouTube? That's because the human that programmed it doesn't like you or what you're posting.
Acquiesce to surveillance is taught at a young age. Eventually, people assume surveillance is necessary to assure good, working social order.
That said, much violent crime transpiring in public places results in no witnesses coming forward. Without surveillance, perpetrators would remain anonymous in crowds. It’s a damnable paradox.
There is no "paradox". Businesses and individuals choose to use cameras for specific purposes. This is perfectly legitimate.
Governmental institutions often use cameras for the same purposes as private businesses. This raises the usual problems with government doing anything, and those problems are best addressed by privatizing those institutions. You may question whether public roads and public schools should have cameras, but private road and private schools certainly can have them.
Learning to value freedom starts and ends with what it taught in a classroom not who is watching or not watching in a hallway.
You seem to be buying into the progressive idea that schools are there to shape kids into proper citizens. That's neither their purpose nor are they able to do that.
Learning to value freedom starts and ends in the home.
NOYB2— No, that’s incorrect. Freedom may begin in the home but it doesn’t end there. There is no such thing as the “private” family apart from the larger community/society. Your family does not and cannot exist in a vacuum. Your family survives and exists in direct relation to the community around it. That is an incontestable fact.
No, that's an incontestable load of hooey. My existence does not exist "in direct relation to the community around it". We are unrelated. They can do what they want and so can I.
I can't quite figure out what you are complaining about here. Every private business uses surveillance, including private educational institutions. Many private homes and cars choose to have camera surveillance as well. This is clearly compatible with libertarian principles. It is normal today. There are costs and benefits, but since it's voluntary, people apparently think the benefits outweigh the costs.
So, why should schools be an exception?
Public schools are not voluntary.
Public schools are voluntary; your children can attend private schools or home school.
But that's not the even the point. Since surveillance is ubiquitous in all other areas of life and widely voluntarily chosen in private life, the argument that surveillance in public school somehow warps the minds of children is obviously bogus.
You should assume that everything you do outside your home is on someone's camera. The sooner kids learn that the better.
Public schooling isn’t voluntary, as you’re forced to pay for it even if you choose to send your children to private school.
Yes, public schooling is voluntary: it is entirely up to you whether you send your kids to public school or not.
The taxation issue is a red herring, since even people without any kids are taxed to pay for public schools.
Schools are normalizing intrusive and abusive gender insanity created by child predators john money and alfred kinsey. Yet parents are forced to fund public schools via property taxes/property extortion and if they don’t the state will steal their property.
Property taxes should be outlawed and allodial titles issued to property owners. No longer will the state be able to force people to fund public schools against their will. They would be able to reward good performing schools with their media of exchange and punish bad one’s by removing their funding from them. This would force competition in education.
Would you rather your kid go to school to learn how to be a good ward of the state, or would you rather your kid go to a school that teaches them to be a liberty loving warrior?
Escaping reality and building safe spaces create subservient boot lickers.
For 4th Amendment purposes, public school officials are a government entity and students (and their parents) are citizens.
The Bill of Rights and Constitution was designed to “restrain” unconstitutional-authority by government officials (public school officials).
If the U.S. Constitution is meaningless, wouldn’t it be smarter to educate solutions that actually solve the violence issue? Maybe education in civility, empathy and work ethic? Maybe adopt 1960’s empathy education by Jane Elliott “Brown Eyes Blue Eyes”?
Maybe offer college credits for kid’s summer jobs like lawn-mowing, cleaning, leaf raking, etc - since the U.S. Constitution is meaningless! At least this education might reduce violence.
For 4th Amendment purposes, public school officials are a government entity and students (and their parents) are citizens.
The Bill of Rights and Constitution was designed to “restrain” unconstitutional-authority by government officials (public school officials).
If the U.S. Constitution is meaningless, wouldn’t it be smarter to educate solutions that actually solve the violence issue? Maybe education in civility, empathy and work ethic? Maybe adopt 1960’s empathy education by Jane Elliott “Brown Eyes Blue Eyes”?
Maybe offer college credits for kid’s summer jobs like lawn-mowing, cleaning, leaf raking, etc - since the U.S. Constitution is meaningless! At least this education might reduce violence.
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Reason's answer to their own lamentations about cameras in schools is that if Statists are going to put up cameras, you might as well teach the kids to be fabulous for them.
100% safe and effective with no downsides?
Your obsession is really unhealthy.
Tuccille makes some good points about creeping surveillance, unfortunately his prose style is so turgid, one-dimensional, and amateurish, that his argument ultimately falls flat. This is a broader problem with this website— Reason simply doesn’t attract first rate writers or thinkers.
It largely attracts and encourages leftist takes on most things too.