Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an IT professional, and let me just say that what MCPS is doing is not something that we do in the industry. For most of us, when we use an official work laptop/device, we should always assume we are monitored because when we started work, we signed an agreement on something that actually gave permission to our company to do so. Secondly, even when we logged in, normally we have to go through a VPN, and the computer will state somewhere that you are in VPN mode. For MCPS, your child can log in to their MCPS account on their parents' personal home computer, close all the windows after they are done, and still be logged in. Unless a child EXPLICITLY LOGS OUT, you will never know if you are still LOGGED IN to the system. Then next day, the parents opens up their computer and access websites such as banks to pay bills, maybe log into some portal to look at health information, maybe email personal information or have private text chats with coworkers/friends. What that means is to a parent, they think the are no longer in the MCPS system and all their activities including their entire screenshots are being tracked and saved by possibly not just the teacher but other administrator. I am sorry, but this is fundamentally very flawed.
I get the MCPS's teacher's perspective about how important it is to track our kids' activities at school. But unless MCPS makes this process of home computer intrusion a lot more clear, or heck, even logs the kid out of the MCPS account after idling for 30 minutes, this cannot possibly have legal legs to stand on.
I have never gotten anything from my school regarding chromebooks usage aside from my kids bringing home their account login/password. Even if the school emails the parents to inform them that kids should be logging out of their computer, I cannot imagine that this would not become a huge legal issue if some important personal information is leaked. This needs to be fixed.
By your kid logging out/you logging your kid out.
I don't think you are understanding how what mcps is doing is not a typical IT standard that is adopted by any organizations that I have worked for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an IT professional, and let me just say that what MCPS is doing is not something that we do in the industry. For most of us, when we use an official work laptop/device, we should always assume we are monitored because when we started work, we signed an agreement on something that actually gave permission to our company to do so. Secondly, even when we logged in, normally we have to go through a VPN, and the computer will state somewhere that you are in VPN mode. For MCPS, your child can log in to their MCPS account on their parents' personal home computer, close all the windows after they are done, and still be logged in. Unless a child EXPLICITLY LOGS OUT, you will never know if you are still LOGGED IN to the system. Then next day, the parents opens up their computer and access websites such as banks to pay bills, maybe log into some portal to look at health information, maybe email personal information or have private text chats with coworkers/friends. What that means is to a parent, they think the are no longer in the MCPS system and all their activities including their entire screenshots are being tracked and saved by possibly not just the teacher but other administrator. I am sorry, but this is fundamentally very flawed.
I get the MCPS's teacher's perspective about how important it is to track our kids' activities at school. But unless MCPS makes this process of home computer intrusion a lot more clear, or heck, even logs the kid out of the MCPS account after idling for 30 minutes, this cannot possibly have legal legs to stand on.
I have never gotten anything from my school regarding chromebooks usage aside from my kids bringing home their account login/password. Even if the school emails the parents to inform them that kids should be logging out of their computer, I cannot imagine that this would not become a huge legal issue if some important personal information is leaked. This needs to be fixed.
By your kid logging out/you logging your kid out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an IT professional, and let me just say that what MCPS is doing is not something that we do in the industry. For most of us, when we use an official work laptop/device, we should always assume we are monitored because when we started work, we signed an agreement on something that actually gave permission to our company to do so. Secondly, even when we logged in, normally we have to go through a VPN, and the computer will state somewhere that you are in VPN mode. For MCPS, your child can log in to their MCPS account on their parents' personal home computer, close all the windows after they are done, and still be logged in. Unless a child EXPLICITLY LOGS OUT, you will never know if you are still LOGGED IN to the system. Then next day, the parents opens up their computer and access websites such as banks to pay bills, maybe log into some portal to look at health information, maybe email personal information or have private text chats with coworkers/friends. What that means is to a parent, they think the are no longer in the MCPS system and all their activities including their entire screenshots are being tracked and saved by possibly not just the teacher but other administrator. I am sorry, but this is fundamentally very flawed.
I get the MCPS's teacher's perspective about how important it is to track our kids' activities at school. But unless MCPS makes this process of home computer intrusion a lot more clear, or heck, even logs the kid out of the MCPS account after idling for 30 minutes, this cannot possibly have legal legs to stand on.
I have never gotten anything from my school regarding chromebooks usage aside from my kids bringing home their account login/password. Even if the school emails the parents to inform them that kids should be logging out of their computer, I cannot imagine that this would not become a huge legal issue if some important personal information is leaked. This needs to be fixed.
By your kid logging out/you logging your kid out.
Anonymous wrote:I am an IT professional, and let me just say that what MCPS is doing is not something that we do in the industry. For most of us, when we use an official work laptop/device, we should always assume we are monitored because when we started work, we signed an agreement on something that actually gave permission to our company to do so. Secondly, even when we logged in, normally we have to go through a VPN, and the computer will state somewhere that you are in VPN mode. For MCPS, your child can log in to their MCPS account on their parents' personal home computer, close all the windows after they are done, and still be logged in. Unless a child EXPLICITLY LOGS OUT, you will never know if you are still LOGGED IN to the system. Then next day, the parents opens up their computer and access websites such as banks to pay bills, maybe log into some portal to look at health information, maybe email personal information or have private text chats with coworkers/friends. What that means is to a parent, they think the are no longer in the MCPS system and all their activities including their entire screenshots are being tracked and saved by possibly not just the teacher but other administrator. I am sorry, but this is fundamentally very flawed.
I get the MCPS's teacher's perspective about how important it is to track our kids' activities at school. But unless MCPS makes this process of home computer intrusion a lot more clear, or heck, even logs the kid out of the MCPS account after idling for 30 minutes, this cannot possibly have legal legs to stand on.
I have never gotten anything from my school regarding chromebooks usage aside from my kids bringing home their account login/password. Even if the school emails the parents to inform them that kids should be logging out of their computer, I cannot imagine that this would not become a huge legal issue if some important personal information is leaked. This needs to be fixed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s school - they’re using a school website with school property, are they not? And they’re supposed to be using it ONLY to do school work, right?
What’s the problem here? Are they supposed to let kids waste their classroom time doing frivolous things or maybe cyber bullying other kids? Why wouldn’t you parents be supporting this?? Tell your kids to only use the school WiFi and device for school related work and get on with your lives.
OP is talking about her home computer, at home, using her personal wifi.
OP out of curiosity, is your school using google docs, SIS or blackboard? Or some other program?
Anonymous wrote:The school is potentially liable for anything inappropriate students do with their MCPS accounts. Of course they have a way to monitor activity.
Anonymous wrote:School just need to parents and students know that ALL web activities will be monitored if they are logged on the school/MCPS website from any device and any location. If they do not want to be monitored, they must close all apps and websites first before logging on the school/MCPS website or chrome account and then must log off the school/MCPS website or chrome account before opening other apps and websites.
Done.
Are parents activities are also being monitored if they are logged into Naviance or MyMCPS? Parents should assume that it is.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher who uses GoGuardian. You can see a child's screen who is at home sick if the kid is logged into their school account on a chrome browser during their normal class time. My school let parents and students know about this and highlighted that students should sign into and out of their school accounts only for school work. This is a brand new piece of software this year but it has been really useful in preventing kids from being off task during class. You wouldn't believe the amount of time many kids spend toggling between school work and .io games. I hope that the county figures out a system for protecting privacy without getting rid of the software because 11-14 year olds really have poor judgement when it comes to internet use.
Anonymous wrote:Off-campus filtering for your school's Chromebooks.
Your student's learning doesn't end in the classroom and neither should your Chromebook's protection. GoGuardian actively filters and monitors student activity both in the classroom and at home.
https://www.goguardian.com/at-home-filtering-allows-complete-content-filtering-for-chromebooks-in-school-or-at-home.html