6533b7cefe1ef96bd1257b27

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Acceptability of the e-authentication in higher education studies: views of students with special educational needs and disabilities

David BaneresTarja LadonlahtiAlexandra OkadaSerpil KocdarSanna UotinenMerja Laamanen

subject

030506 rehabilitationPersonal dataeducación superiorSpecial educationaccesibilidadAcceptabilitymedia_commonlcsh:LC8-6691lcsh:T58.5-58.64lcsh:Information technology4. Education05 social scienceseducació superiordades personals050301 educatione-AuthenticationAccessibilityAuthentication (law)acceptabilitatComputer Science ApplicationssaavutettavuusStudents with special educational needs and disabilitiesaccessibilitat0305 other medical sciencePsychologyResearch Articleautenticación electrónicaEducation HigherHigher educationmedia_common.quotation_subjectCheatingInternet privacyEducationerityisopiskelijat03 medical and health sciencesOriginalityaceptabilidadEnsenyament universitariHigher educationsähköinen tunnistaminendatos personaleslcsh:Special aspects of educationbusiness.industryEducational technologyestudiantes con necesidades educativas especiales y discapacidadesautenticació electrònicahenkilötiedotkorkeakouluopiskeluKey (cryptography)Enseñanza universitariaComputerized adaptive testingbusiness0503 educationestudiants amb necessitats educatives especials i discapacitats

description

AbstractTrust-based e-assessment systems are increasingly important in the digital age for both academic institutions and students, including students with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). Recent literature indicates a growing number of studies about e-authentication and authorship verification for quality assurance with more flexible modes of assessment. Yet understanding the acceptability of e-authentication systems among SEND students is underexplored. This study examines SEND students’ views about the use of e-authentication systems, including perceived advantages and disadvantages of new technology-enhanced assessment. This study aims to shed light on this area by examining the attitudes of 267 SEND students who used, or were aware of, an authentication system known as adaptive trust-based e-assessment system for learning (TeSLA). The results suggest a broadly positive acceptability of these e-authentication technologies by SEND students. In the view of these students, the key advantages are the ability of proving the originality of their work, and trust-based e-assessment results; the key disadvantages are the possibility that the technology might not work or present wrong outputs in terms of cheating.

http://hdl.handle.net/10609/136826