1 / 22

What you should know about FERPA

What you should know about FERPA. Office of Academic & Student Affairs Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia. A Disclaimer…. This presentation is designed to give a brief overview of FERPA as it relates to the academic records of students.

elie
Télécharger la présentation

What you should know about FERPA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What you should know aboutFERPA Office of Academic & Student Affairs Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia

  2. A Disclaimer…. • This presentation is designed to give a brief overview of FERPA as it relates to the academic records of students. • Any questions regarding specific matters should be referred to the Registrar’s Office on your campus. The Office of Legal Affairs should be consulted when necessary. • FERPA should not be confused with the Open Records Act or Solomon Amendment.

  3. What is FERPA and for what purpose does it exist?

  4. Does FERPA apply to applicants? FERPA does not apply to applicants who are denied admission or to those applicants who were accepted but did not attend.

  5. Does FERPA apply to all students?

  6. Briefly, what does FERPA guarantee? • FERPA gives students the right to inspect and review their own records • to request amendments to their record • to have some control over the release of personally identifiable information from their records

  7. Who is responsible for seeing that FERPA is upheld? • Generally speaking, all employees who have access to records are responsible for guarding the confidentiality of student records. • Specifically, requests for access to records, requests for amendment of records, and complaints regarding any violation of FERPA are typically filed with the institution’s Registrar.

  8. What is meant by “Disclosure” of Information? • Permitting access to or the release of personally identifiable information to any party. This includes any communication by oral, written, electronic or any other means. • Schools are not allowed to disclose information (other than “Directory Information”) without the student’s written consent except under very limited conditions.

  9. How are students made aware of FERPA? • Although we are required to notify students annually regarding their FERPA rights, the methods used to communicate this information are left up to the school. • Notification at most institutions is done minimally through the catalog and the website.

  10. What is Directory Information? "Directory Information" is information not generally considered harmful or an invasion of privacy if disclosed. This often includes: • Name, address, e-mail address and telephone listing • Level (graduate or undergraduate) • Field of study (major) • Dates of attendance • Degrees and date awarded • "Directory Information" cannot include student identification numbers or social security numbers.

  11. Can a student prohibit release of “Directory Information”? • Yes. Students who wish to discuss the prohibition of release of "Directory Information" should contact the Registrar’s Office. • Students can also request that their record be marked as “Confidential” to prohibit release except under limited circumstances.

  12. How can I know if a student has asked that information not be released? • The student’s computerized record will have notation of such displayed at the top of every form, such as “CONFIDENTIAL.” • Students who wish to not have directory information displayed on the web or in printed directories will have a special code, such as RNP “Request No Print in Directory” in their computerized record. No one should generate lists with student information without checking to see if any students have their record flagged as “CONFIDENTIAL” or have requested that directory information not print.

  13. Are parents exempt from FERPA restrictions? • No. Parents do not have the right to access records of students over the age of 18 at the post-secondary level. Not even if they are paying all tuition…except in these three cases: 1. They have the written consent of the student. 2. In response to a subpoena (the student must be notified that records were released). 3. They can prove that they claimed the student as a dependent on their most recent Federal Income Tax form.

  14. Can Information Be Released if a Student’s Record is Marked “Confidential”? • Yes, if you have one of the following: 1. Student’s Written Request 2. Subpoena 3. Copy of Federal Tax Form Claiming the Student as a Dependent HOWEVER, no information should be released without one of the items listed above!

  15. What should you do if you are not sure if you can release information? • When in doubt, saying nothing is your best option • Don’t play the “Guessing Game” • It is far better to NOT release information than to release information incorrectly

  16. Which requests should you forward to the Registrar’s Office? • All requests for transcripts - only the Registrar’s Office can generate an official transcript • Certification requests - verification of enrollment for lenders, health insurance, student car insurance discount forms, etc. • Questions regarding the academic record of any student

  17. A father calls and asks for his son’s grades. He can fax a copy of his tax return proving that the student is his dependent. Can you release the grades? Only if you can know with certainty that you are speaking to the father (very hard to do over the phone). Suggest that his son order a transcript to be mailed to the father’s address. Let’s See How FERPA Smart You Are

  18. An author requests academic information on Jimmy Carter. Since all of President Carter’s records are already a matter of public record, can you release the information? No, FERPA rights continue even after a student is no longer enrolled. FERPA rights DO end upon the death of a student. How Would You Respond To...

  19. A student asks to see his records. You notice that he has a hold for parking fines. Can you make him pay the fine before viewing his record? No, students have the right to view their record even if they owe money. Can he have a copy of his transcript? No, the institution is not required to release a copy if the student owes money. OK, What About…

  20. A County police officer calls you because she needs to find a student. She has been looking for the student for a week, but can’t catch him at his residence hall room. Can you give her the student’s schedule? If she’s been looking for a week, it’s not an emergency! The release of non-directory information is appropriate only if “necessary to protect the health or safety of the student or other individuals.” But It’s An Emergency...

  21. The Baptist Student Union affiliated with your institution asks for a list of all new international students and their country of origin so that they can invite them to a dinner during the holidays. OK? Although the thought is a nice one, country of origin is not considered “Directory Information.” The BSU affiliates are not considered to be “school officials” and should be treated like any outside party. One Last Example

  22. Know Everything Now??? • No one can possibly know every detail of FERPA and how it is to be applied. • When in doubt, DON’T release information! • Failure to comply with FERPA can not only cause legal difficulty for your institution, but have human resource implications as well.

More Related