Thus far, the benefits of using the RFID system have been twofold, says John Cook, sales manager at
Premier Electronics, a systems integrator and designer based in Crystal Lake, Ill., that collaborated with EPCSolutions to deploy the technology. First, Cook says, students can now exit the building more quickly. And second, the number of unauthorized students who leave the building—which the school estimates to have been up to 30 per day in previous years—is now down to zero.
According to the school's IT director, the high school has decided against deploying a possible extension to the system—adding a software layer to the access control system that would utilize biometric software to compare the card ID photo with the student presenting the ID, by comparing a facial scan of that child with the ID photo. This feature is no longer being considered because the state of Illinois recently passed legislation prohibiting the use of biometric-based technology in applications involving minors, unless the party deploying the technology receives permission from each minor's parent. "It would have been an administrative nightmare [to secure those permissions]," the IT director states.
Still, the school has already begun expanding the current RFID access control system to include new applications. Some students are required to attend a special tutoring class in the morning. On any given day, if one of them fails to attend that session (electronic attendance is taken by the teacher) but attempts to leave campus during lunch that same day, the software triggers a red background to appear on the security guard's monitor. The software will also flash a red background if a student is under a disciplinary action that has not yet been completed.
In addition, says the school's director of technology, a reader station has been installed at the entrance to the school's student lounge. If a student of any grade attempts to enter the lounge instead of attending a scheduled class, a red background appears with the child's photo on a monitor's computer, and that pupil is turned away.
These RFID-based applications are proving very effective in discouraging students from attempting to leave campus or enter the student lounge without authorization, the IT director says. In the future, the school may use the RFID-enabled ID cards to verify students are authorized to attend sporting events, or to check books out of the library.
The school conducted informal testing of the RFID hardware and software system before rolling it out this fall, but made no prior announcements to students, parents or teachers about its planned use of the technology. According to the school's IT director, after detecting the inlays inside their IDs early in the year, some pupils raised privacy concerns regarding the school's RFID use. However, the IT director notes, the school has encountered no push-back from students or parents following the school newspaper's publication of an article describing the RFID technology and explaining how the school was using it.