Protecting the Privacy of Student Education Records
Student education records are official and confidential documents
protected by one of the nation's strongest privacy protection laws, the
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). FERPA, also known as the
Buckley Amendment, defines education records as all records that schools or
education agencies maintain about students.
FERPA gives parents (as well as students in postsecondary schools) the
right to review and confirm the accuracy of education records. This and
other United States "privacy" laws ensure that information about
citizens collected by schools and government agencies can be released only
for specific and legally defined purposes. Since enacting FERPA in 1974,
Congress has strengthened privacy safeguards of education records through
this law, refining and clarifying family rights and agency responsibilities
to protect those rights.
FERPA's legal statute citation can be found in the U.S. Code (20 USC
1232g), which incorporates all amendments to FERPPA. FERPA regulations are
found in the Federal Register (34 CFR Part 99). FERPA's 1994 amendments are
found in Public Law (P.L.) 103-382.
FERPA Protects Privacy
FERPA applies to public schools and state or local education agencies
that receive Federal education funds, and it protects both paper and
computerized records. In addition to the Federal laws that restrict
disclosure of information from student records, most states also have
privacy protection laws that reinforce FERPA. State laws can supplement
FERPA, but compliance with FERPA is necessary if schools are to continue to
be eligible to receive Federal education funds.
FERPA requires schools and local education agencies to annually notify
parents of their rights under FERPA. The notice must effectively inform
parents with disabilities or who have a primary home language other than
English. The annual notice pertaining to FERPA rights must explain that
parents may inspect and review records and, if they believe the records to
be inaccurate, they may seek to amend them. Parents also have the right to
consent to disclosures of personally identifiable information in the record,
except under authorized circumstances.
FERPA gives both parents, custodial and noncustodial, equal access to
student information unless the school has evidence of a court order or state
law revoking these rights. When students reach the age of 18, or when they
become students at postsecondary education institutions, they become
"eligible students' and rights under FERPA transfer to them. However,
parents retain access to student records of children who are their
dependents for tax purposes.
FERPA Defines an Education Record
Education records include a range of information about a
student that is maintained in schools in any recorded way, such as
handwriting, print, computer media, video or audio tape, film, microfilm,
and microfiche. Examples are:
- Date and place of birth, parent(s) and/or guardian addresses, and
where parents can be contacted in emergencies;
- Grades, test scores, courses taken, academic specializations and
activities, and official letters regarding a student's status in school;
- Special education records;
- Disciplinary records;
- Medical and health records that the school creates or collects and
maintains;
- Documentation of attendance, schools attended, courses taken,
awards conferred, and degrees earned;
- Personal information such as student's identification code, social
security number, picture, or other information that would make it easy
to identify or locate a student.
Personal notes made by teachers and other school officials that are not
shared with others are not considered education records. Additionally, law
enforcement records created and maintained by a school or district's law
enforcement unit are not education records.
Part of the education record, known as directory information,
includes personal information about a student that can be made public
according to a school system's student records policy. Directory information
may include a student's name, address, and telephone number, and other
information typically found in school yearbooks or athletic programs. Other
examples are names and pictures of participants in various extracurricular
activities or recipients of awards, pictures of students, and height and
weight of athletes.
Each year schools must give parents public notice of the types of
information designated as directory information. By a specified time after
parents are notified of their review rights, parents may ask to remove all
or part of the information on their child that they do not wish to be
available to the public without their consent.
FERPA Guarantees Parent Review and Appeal
If, upon review, parents find an education record is inaccurate or
misleading, they may request changes or corrections, and schools and
education agencies must respond promptly to these requests.
Requests should be made in writing, according to an agency's annual
notice of procedures for exercising rights to amend records. Within a
reasonable time period, the school or agency must decide if the request to
change a record is consistent with its own assessment of the accuracy of the
record. If a parent's request is denied, he or she must be offered the
opportunity for a hearing. If the disagreement with the record continues
after the hearing, the parent may insert an explanation of the objection in
the record. FERPA's provisions do not apply to grades and educational
decisions about children that school personnel make.
While parents have a right to review records, schools are not required by
Federal law to provide copies of information, unless providing copies would
be the only way of giving parents access. Schools may charge a reasonable
fee for obtaining records, and they may not destroy records if a request for
access is pending.
FERPA Restricts Disclosure of Student Records
Local education agencies and schools may release information from
students' education records with the prior written consent of parents, under
limited conditions specified by law, or as stated in local agencies' student
records policies. The same rules restricting disclosures apply to records
maintained by third parties acting on behalf of schools, such as state and
local education agencies, intermediate administrative units, researchers,
psychologists, or medical practitioners who work for or are under contract
to schools.
If an education agency or school district has a policy of disclosing
records, it must specify the criteria for determining school officials
within an agency, including teachers, who have a legitimate educational
interest. Generally, school officials have legitimate educational interest
if they need to review an education record to fulfill their professional
responsibilities.
Teachers and school officials who work with the students and schools to
which students apply for entrance may also have access to education records
without prior consent of the parent. In addition, information from students'
records may be released to state and local education officials to conduct
audits or to review records in compliance with Federal laws. Schools may
also disclose information from education records without the consent of
parents in response to subpoenas or court orders. A school official must
make a reasonable effort to notify the parent before complying with the
subpoena unless the subpoena is issued to enforce a law and specifies not to
notify the parent. In emergencies, school officials can provide information
from education records to protect the health or safety of the student or
others.
There are cases when schools or school systems decide it is in the public
interests to participate in policy evaluations or research studies. If
student records are to be released for these purposes, the school or school
system must obtain prior consent of the parent. Signed and dated written
consent must:
- Specify the records that will be released;
- State the reason for releasing the records;
- Identify the groups or individuals who will receive the records.
In general, information about each request for records access and each
disclosure of information from an education record must be maintained as
part of the record until the school or agency destroys the education record.
Outside parties receiving records must receive a written explanation of the
restrictions on the re-release of information.
Additional FERPA Provisions
In 1994, the Improving America's School Act amended several components of
FERPA, tightening privacy assurances for students and families. The
amendments apply to the following key areas:
- Parents have the right to review the education records of their
children maintained by the state education agencies;
- Any third party that inappropriately re-releases personally
identifiable information from an education record cannot have access to
education records for five years;
- Information about disciplinary actions taken against students may
be shared, without prior consent of the parent, with officials in other
education institutions;
- Schools may release records in compliance with certain law
enforcement judicial orders and subpoenas without notifying parents.
Questions? Call the Local School System, State Education Agency, or
the Federal Family Policy Compliance Office.
School districts, state education agencies, and the U.S. Department of
Education all offer assistance about FERPA. Before contacting Federal
officials, however, you can often get a direct and immediate response from
your local or state education officials.
The Family Policy Compliance Office can be reached at the
following address;
U.S. Department of Education
600 Independent Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20202-4605
(202) 260-3887
This document was prepared by Policy Studies Associates, Inc. under
contract to the Council of Chief State School Officers. The document was
printed by the National Center for Education Statistics for the National
Forum on Education Statistics. The Forum represents the education agencies
of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and five outlying areas as well
as professional associations and federal agencies that are users or
providers of education data. The views expressed here do not necessarily
reflect the policy of the U.S. Department of Education, and no official
endorsement should be inferred. The document has been revised in accordance
with the final regulations implementing Section 249 of the Improving America
Schools Act, Federal Register, Vol. 61 (226), Thursday, November 21,
1996, pp. 59291-59298.
Revised, January 1997
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