Table of Contents
The CoSN Trusted Learning Environment (TLE) Seal sets a high bar for student data privacy, but before districts can apply, they need to know where they stand. The Self-Evaluation is designed to provide that clarity.
It asks districts to rate their policies and practices across five areas—Leadership, Business, Data Security, Professional Development, and Classroom—using a simple 1–4 scale. Instead of a pass/fail test, the Self-Evaluation is a mirror: it shows where a district is strong, where it needs growth, and how to prioritize improvements.
As the podcast explains, this process forces leaders to look at the entire picture—not just IT systems, but also leadership accountability, vendor contracts, teacher practices, and communication with families.
Inside the Podcast
In this CoSN podcast episode, we walk through how the Self-Evaluation works and what it asks districts to consider:
- How the scoring works:
- 1 = “Not yet considered”
- 2 = “We’ve begun to work on this”
- 3 = “We have this practice in place”
- 4 = “We have a mature policy and process in place”
- Leadership: Are district leaders accountable for privacy? Is there an executive leader responsible for data privacy policies? Do leaders’ decisions consistently reflect an understanding of privacy and security?
- Business: Does the district vet vendors for privacy and security? Are staff trained to use that process? Are privacy protections built into contracts?
- Data Security: Are there enforceable policies for data storage on devices and in the cloud? Is there a tested disaster recovery plan? Are regular audits conducted?
- Professional Development: Is privacy built into annual staff training? Are resources and templates available? Are parents offered awareness training?
- Classroom: Do teachers promote information literacy, use vetted tools, and model safe practices? Are they communicating clearly with parents about how data is used?
The podcast emphasizes that the Self-Evaluation is about culture as much as compliance. Districts don’t just check boxes—they build accountability, awareness, and trust.
What Happens Next
Completing the Self-Evaluation is only the beginning. Once results are in, districts can:
- Build an improvement plan to strengthen weak areas.
- Prioritize changes, such as updating incident response plans or improving parent communication.
- Decide whether to aim for the full TLE Seal or start with a Mini Seal in one practice area.
The best part? The Self-Evaluation is free. Even if a district isn’t ready to apply for the Seal yet, the tool sparks important conversations with staff, school boards, and communities about how student data is protected.
Key Takeaways
- Measure First: The Self-Evaluation is the essential first step in the Seal journey.
- Holistic Lens: Privacy is more than IT—it spans leadership, contracts, training, and classrooms.
- Roadmap Tool: The results guide action plans, not pass/fail judgments.
- Accessible to All: Free and valuable even for districts not yet applying for the Seal.
Trusted Learning Environment Resources
Full Seal Applications
Mini Seal Applications
- Leadership Practice
- Business Practice
- Data Security Practice
- Professional Development Practice
- Classroom Practice
Renewal Options
Visit the CoSN Trusted Learning Environment page to download the Self-Evaluation, explore application options, and begin your district’s journey toward building a trusted digital future.
Subscribe to edCircuit to stay up to date on all of our shows, podcasts, news, and thought leadership articles.



