FERPA
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)
What is FERPA?
What documents can be removed from an education record before the student views the
record?
What is directory information?
When do you need consent to disclose personally identifiable information from an education
record (including transcripts)?
What is "Personally Identifiable Information"?
When is the student's consent not required to disclose information?
How does increasing technology impact FERPA at Chabot?
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, also known as the Buckley Amendment, protects the privacy of student records.
The Act provides for the right to inspect and review education records, the right
to seek to amend those records, and to limit disclosure of information from the records.
The Act applies to all institutions that are the recipients of federal funding.
Who is protected under FERPA?Students who are currently enrolled in higher education institutions or formerly enrolled,
regardless of their age or status in regard to parental dependency. Students who have
applied but have not attended an institution do not have rights under FERPA.
Student and Parent Rights Relating to Educational RecordsStudents have a right to know about the purposes, content and location of information
kept as part of their educational records. They have a right to gain access to and
challenge the content of their educational records. They have a right to expect that
information in their educational records will be kept confidential, disclosed only
with their permission or under provisions of the law. Students have a right to permit
or prevent disclosure of certain information in their educational records. Parents
have the right to expect confidentiality of certain information about them in student
records.
Educational RecordsStudent educational records are specifically defined as records, files, documents
and other materials that contain information directly related to a student and maintained
by the college or someone acting for the college according to policy. Excluded from
student educational records are records of instructional, supervisory and administrative
personnel and ancillary educational personnel in the sole possession of the maker
and that are not accessible or revealed to any other person, except a substitute.
Additionally, notes of a professor or staff member intended for his/her own use are
not part of the educational record, nor are records of police services, application
records of students not admitted to the college, alumni records, or records of physicians,
psychiatrists, psychologists, or other recognized professionals. Records relating
to an individual who is employed by an educational agency or institution not as a
result of his/her status as a student are also excluded. However, employment records
relating to college students who are employed as a result of their status as students
are considered educational records.
What is not included in an educational record?- Sole-possession records or private notes held by educational personnel which are not accessible or released to other personnel
- Law enforcement or campus security records which are solely for law enforcement purposes
- Records relating to an individual's employment by the institution (unless employment is contingent on student status)
- Records relating to treatment provided by a physician, psychiatrist, psychologist or other recognized professional or paraprofessional and disclosed only to individuals providing treatment
- Records of an institution which contain only information about an individual obtained after that person is no longer a student at that institution (i.e., alumni records)
- Any information that pertains to another student
- Financial records of the student's parents
- Some confidential letters and statements of recommendation under conditions described in FERPA section 99.12.
Institutions may disclose information on a student without violating FERPA through what is known as
"directory information". This generally includes a student's name, address, telephone
number, date and place of birth, major field of study, participation in officially
recognized sports and activities, weight and height of athletes, dates of attendance,
degrees and awards received and other similar information. Each institution is required
to annually notify students in attendance of what constitutes directory information.
This notice must also provide procedures for students to restrict the institution
from releasing his/her directory information.
Who would generally be permitted access without the student's written consent?- School officials who have "legitimate educational interests" as defined in the college's annual FERPA notification
- Parents of a "dependent student" as defined by the Internal Revenue Code
- The issuer of a judicial order or subpoena which allows the institution to release records without the student's consent, however, a "reasonable effort" must generally be made to notify the student before complying with the order
With specific exceptions (listed below), a signed and dated consent by the student must be provided by the student before any disclosure is made. The written consent must:
- Specify the records that may be disclosed
- State the purpose of disclosure
- Identify the party or class of parties to whom the disclosure may be made
- The student's name
- Name of the student's parent or other family members
- Address of the student or student's family
- A personal identifier, such as a social security number or student number
- A list of personal characteristics that would make the student's identity easily traceable
The exceptions are:
- To college faculty, staff, and administrators with a legitimate educational interest (defined in the college's annual notification)
- To parents of a "dependent student"
- To Federal, State and local education authorities involving an audit or evaluation of compliance with education programs
- In connection with processing Financial Aid
- To organizations conducting studies for, or on behalf of, educational institutions
- To accrediting organizations
- To transfer college if student has formally applied for admission to attend the transfer college.
- To comply with judicial order or subpoena
- Health or safety emergency
- Directory information
- To the student
- Results of disciplinary hearing to an alleged victim of a crime of violence
Requests to disclose should always be handled with caution and approached on a case-by-case basis.
The use of computerized record-keeping systems is increasing at a tremendous rate.
Electronic data will eventually replace most paper documents. We try to ensure that
appropriate policies are established to protect the confidentiality of those records,
educate faculty, administrators, staff, and students, about the policies, and make
sure the policies are enforced. The same principles of confidentiality must be applied
to electronic data as apply to paper documents. These general guidelines are not intended
to be legal advice. This document provides only a summary of FERPA.
For further FERPA information or clarification, contact:
Campus FERPA Official & Student Discipline Representative
Dr. Matthew Kritscher
Vice President Student Services
(510) 723-6744
Student Records Representative
Paulette Lino
Director, Admissions & Records
plino@chabotcollege.edu