Pennsylvania School District Hacked By Their Own Students

Students at a Pennsylvania school district took a senior-year tradition way too far when they hacked into the district’s school systems, accessing test scores and personal information for more than 12,000 students, reported the Washington Post. The breach was first discovered on Oct. 11.

The high school students wanted to win a water-gun fight and were trying to get other students’ home addresses.

The students got “teacher-level access” to systems and then proceeded to use “unethical coding methods” to obtain the addresses in addition to GPAs, SAT scores, phone numbers and other private information about every student in the district. The information wasn’t tampered with but the data could be used for identity theft, a district spokeswoman Jennifer Shealy told the Washington Post. Administrators believe the hacks were not malicious.

Still, Downingtown Area School District considers the breach a crime and is considering whether to press charges on the students.

In addition to staff and students changing their passwords, administrators are updating internal systems to prevent another breach. This was the latest attack on school systems, which can be easy targets for data breaches.

About the Author

Yvonne Marquez is senior editor of Spaces4Learning. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • California School District Completes Elementary School Modernization

    The San Diego Unified School District in San Diego, Calif., recently held a ribbon-cutting for a whole-site modernization of Pacific Beach Elementary School, according to local news. The school first opened with one building in 1930 and added six more between 1938 and 1957.

  • Full Sail University Announces First Student Housing Facility

    Full Sail University in Winter Park, Fla., recently announced that development has begun on its first student housing community, according to a news release. The university is partnering with Nvision Development for construction and long-term management of the facility, which will stand five stories and have the capacity for more than 570 beds.

  • Indiana Wesleyan University Schedules Grand Opening for New Welcome Center

    Indiana Wesleyan University recently announced that it will soon open a new Welcome Center on its campus in Marion, Ind., according to a news release. The facility will serve as the home base for prospective students and their families to learn more about the university and student life there. A ribbon-cutting ceremony is scheduled for February 19.

  • Chartwells Launches Campus Dining Evaluation Framework

    Contract food-service management provider Chartwells Higher Education recently announced the launch of BLUEPRINT, according to a news release. The evaluation framework was designed to provide a data-driven and customizable roadmap towards optimizing campus dining services and, by extension, the student experience.