Post 8

  1. Should facial recognition be used in schools? If so, why? If not, what limits should be placed on its use?

I don’t think facial  recognition should be used in school because that’s doing a lot plus its time consuming.

2. Have you ever used any kind of facial recognition technology — say, to verify your identity at the airport, unlock your smartphone, sort and tag photos online, or anything else?

Yes, I used facial recognition for the iphone.

3.What are some of the potential benefits of schools using facial recognition technology? Robert LiPuma, the Lockport City School District’s director of technology, believes that if the technology had been in place, the school shooting in Parkland, Fla., may never have happened. Do you agree?S

Some benefits from using the facial recognition is schools is actually knowing that that student attends the school and no intruders are trying to get in. I agree with Robet LiPuma.

4. What are the potential dangers of facial recognition in schools? Jim Shultz, a parent, argues that the Lockport City School District’s decision to use facial recognition has “turned our kids into lab rats in a high-tech experiment in privacy invasion.” How persuasive are his arguments against the district’s decision?

Some potential dangers of the facial recognition is the technology malfunctions and they let the wrong students in or keep the right students from coming in. I don’t think his argument is really persuasive.

5. Studies have shown that some of the most popular surveillance systems exhibited bias, falsely identifying African-American and Asian faces 10 to 100 times more than Caucasian faces and exhibiting a higher rate of mistaken matches among children. How worried should we be about bias and what Jason Nance calls the unintended consequences of facial recognition in schools?

I think we should be worried.

6. How safe do you feel in your school? What safety procedures are currently in place?

I don’t feel extremely safe at school. We have lockdown, shelter in place, tornado drills and fire drills.

7. “We all want to keep our children safe in school, but there are more effective, proven ways to do so that are less costly.”  School districts could, for instance, take smaller steps like upgrading entrances and exits, hiring school resource officers, and investing in counselors and social workers.

Do you agree? If yes, what safety alternatives would you propose for your school?

I agree and i would propose we could hire school resource officers, we only have one.

8.  Finally, would you recommend that your school use facial recognition technology? If it were used in your school, do you think you would feel safer? Why or why not?

No, I wouldn’t feel safe because its a possibility it can malfunction.

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