Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research

Despite the claimed worth and huge interest regarding the increasing volumes of complex data sets and the rewarding promise to improve research, there is, however, a growing concern regarding data privacy that affects both qualitative and quantitative higher education research. Within the contempora...

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Main Authors: Diana Florea, Silvia Florea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8744
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spelling doaj-e2a9f1964c4e447e905d604e61c64a7d2020-11-25T03:03:53ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-10-01128744874410.3390/su12208744Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education ResearchDiana Florea0Silvia Florea1Faculty of Letters and Arts, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, 550024 Sibiu, RomaniaUNESCO Chair in Quality Management of Higher Education and Lifelong Learning, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, 550024 Sibiu, RomaniaDespite the claimed worth and huge interest regarding the increasing volumes of complex data sets and the rewarding promise to improve research, there is, however, a growing concern regarding data privacy that affects both qualitative and quantitative higher education research. Within the contemporary debates on the impact of Big Data on the nature of higher education research and the effective ways to harmonize Big Data practice with privacy restrictions and regulations, this study sets out to qualitatively examine current issues regarding data privacy, anonymity, informed consent and confidentiality in data-centric higher education research, with a focus on the data collector, data subject and data user. We argue that within current regulations, data protection of research subjects concerns more data collection and disclosure and insufficiently describes use, having procedural implications for both the complex nature of higher education (HE) research and the type of research data being collected. We work our argument through an examination of several factors that call for a reconsideration of data privacy and access to private information in HE research. The conclusions indicate that Big Data-centric HE research is increasingly becoming a mainstream research paradigm which needs to address critical data privacy issues before being widely embraced.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8744Big Dataprivacyhigher educationresearchethics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diana Florea
Silvia Florea
spellingShingle Diana Florea
Silvia Florea
Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research
Sustainability
Big Data
privacy
higher education
research
ethics
author_facet Diana Florea
Silvia Florea
author_sort Diana Florea
title Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research
title_short Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research
title_full Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research
title_fullStr Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research
title_full_unstemmed Big Data and the Ethical Implications of Data Privacy in Higher Education Research
title_sort big data and the ethical implications of data privacy in higher education research
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Despite the claimed worth and huge interest regarding the increasing volumes of complex data sets and the rewarding promise to improve research, there is, however, a growing concern regarding data privacy that affects both qualitative and quantitative higher education research. Within the contemporary debates on the impact of Big Data on the nature of higher education research and the effective ways to harmonize Big Data practice with privacy restrictions and regulations, this study sets out to qualitatively examine current issues regarding data privacy, anonymity, informed consent and confidentiality in data-centric higher education research, with a focus on the data collector, data subject and data user. We argue that within current regulations, data protection of research subjects concerns more data collection and disclosure and insufficiently describes use, having procedural implications for both the complex nature of higher education (HE) research and the type of research data being collected. We work our argument through an examination of several factors that call for a reconsideration of data privacy and access to private information in HE research. The conclusions indicate that Big Data-centric HE research is increasingly becoming a mainstream research paradigm which needs to address critical data privacy issues before being widely embraced.
topic Big Data
privacy
higher education
research
ethics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8744
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