Title: Victor%20DeVore,%20San%20diego%20community%20college%20district
1FERPA PRIVACY STUDENT RECORDS RECORD RET
RETENTION FERPA PRIVACY CENSUS PERSONAL
GHTS FERPA, RECORD RETENTION, STUDENTS R
SB1440 GRADUATION AND PERSISTANCE SUCCE
EVALUATIONS GRADES DESTRUCTION SLO FERP
REGISTRATION OUTCOMES CSU UC GRADUATIO
STUDENT SUCCESS APPLICATION COLLEGE ASSO
- Victor DeVore, San diego community college
district - Susan bricker, Pasadena city college
2Learning Outcomes
- Understand what FERPA is and what records are
affected by FERPA - Understand students rights regarding his/her
FERPA protected records - Understand when consent is needed to share
student records - Understand record retention schedule and best
practices - Understand federal, state and accreditor
requirements
3WHAT IS FERPA?
4FERPA
FERPA stands for the Family Educational Rights
and Privacy Act of 1974 FERPA is a Federal Law
that is designed to protect the privacy of
education records, to establish the right of
students to inspect and review their education
records, and to provide guidelines for the
correction of inaccurate and misleading data
through informal and formal hearings. FERPA is
enforced by the Family Policy Compliance Office,
U.S. Department of Education, Washington DC
5The Essence of the ACT
- College students must be permitted to inspect
their own education records. - School officials may not disclose personally
identifiable information (PII) about students nor
permit inspection of their records without
written permission unless such action is covered
by certain exceptions permitted by the Act.
6The Laws
- Federal
- Statute 20 U.S.C., 1232g
- Regulations 34 C.F.R., 99, et seq.
- State
- California Constitution, Art. 1, 1
- Education Code, 76200, et seq.
- California Code of Regulations, title 5, 54600
et seq. - Local Policy
7KEY Terms and Concepts
- Education Record
- Directory Information
- School Official
- Legitimate Educational Interest
- Prior Consent to Disclosure
- Students right to access their education records
as outlined in the College Catalog and College
Website
8What is an education record?
- Any record, with certain exceptions, maintained
by an institution that is directly related to a
student or students. This record can contain a
students name(s) or information from which an
individual student can be personally identified. - FERPA rights attach to students as soon as the
student is in attendance at your college.
9What is In Attendance
- Defined by local policy.
- Local policy can define it to begin as early as
when the student submits an application or as
late as when the student shows up for class. - This is retroactive, meaning FERPA rights apply
to all records, even those that predate the
students attendance.
10What is not an education record?
- Sole Possession notes
- Law enforcement unit records
- Financial records of the students parents
- Records maintained exclusively for individuals in
their capacity as employees - Medical Treatment records (HIPAA)
- Alumni Records
11Law Enforcement Records
- Records created and maintained by the colleges
law enforcement unit (e.g. campus police) for a
law enforcement purpose. - However, if you give education records to your
law enforcement unit for an investigation
(provided you have consent or an applicable
exemption e.g. subpoena, or health and safety)
those records do not lose their status as
education records.
12What is personally identifiable?
- Personally Identifiable means data or information
which includes - The name of the student, the students parent, or
other family members. - The students campus or home address
- A personal identifier (such as a social security
number or student number) - A list of personal characteristics or other
information which would make the students
identity known with reasonable certainty
13Grades posted outside of professors office with
student id?
14What is directory information?
- Although not required to be included in the
institutions annual notification, the
institution must notify students of what
information the institution has designated as
directory information. - The Family Policy Compliance Office has
recommended that this notification be part of the
institutions annual FERPA notification to
students. - Students must be able to opt-out of directory
information being published.
15What is directory information?
- Some of the following are possible items that a
college may designate as directory information - Name, address, phone number, email address, dates
of attendance and enrollment status (full-time,
half-time) - Student participation in officially recognized
activities and sports including weight, height,
and high school of graduation of athletic team
members - Degrees and awards received by students,
including honors, scholarship awards, athletic
wards, Vice Presidents and Presidents
recognition.
16What can never be directory information?
- Directory information can never include the
following - Race, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation
- SSN
- Grades
- GPA
- Citizenship
- Religion
- Student ID Numbers (unless used as a login
combined with password/pin may include ID badges
but must require a second authentication feature.)
17School officials
- A school official can be a person
- 1. Employed by the college in an administrative,
supervisory, academic, research, or support staff
position (including law enforcement and health
staff personnel), - 2. Elected to the Board of Trustees,
- 3. Or a company employed by or under contract to
the college to perform a specific task, such as,
an agent, an attorney, an auditor, or an
outsourced service provider. (e.g. San Diego
County Sheriff) - 4. Serving as a student representative on an
official committee, such as a disciplinary
committee, or assisting another school official
in performing his or her tasks. (Teachers
Assistants)
18Legitimate Educational interest
- The demonstrated need to know by those officials
of an institution who act in the students
educational interest, including faculty,
administrators, clerical and professional
employees, and other persons who manage student
record information. - Although FERPA does not define legitimate
educational interest, it states that
institutions must specify the criteria for
determining it.
19Inspection and review
- Students have the right to see everything in
their education record except - Information about other students
- Financial records of parents and
- Confidential letters of recommendation if they
waive their right of access - FERPA does not prescribe what records are created
or how long they are kept. However you cannot
destroy a record if there is a request to inspect
and review. It is important to know and
understand your districts records retention
policy. (Ref. BP/AP 3310)
20Inspection and review
- Students have an absolute right of access to
their educational records. - If a student (or where applicable, a parent)
requests to review a record, you must comply
within 15 days. (State law states 15 days,
federal law states 45, however since state law is
more protective, state law trumps federal law.) - Copies of records are not required, however you
must provide them if by not doing so you would
deny student access (e.g. commute distance is not
feasible.)
21Inspection and review
- Title 5, Section 59410 does permit districts,
when delineated in board policy, to withhold
transcripts, diplomas, grades and other
registration privileges if to student, or former
student, fails to pay proper financial
obligations due to the college. - However, students will always have the ability to
inspect their records regardless of financial or
other holds
22Right to amend a record
- Student has the right to seek to amend
information in their students record. - Except a college is not required by FERPA to
afford the student the right to seek to change
substantive decisions made by school officials
such as grades, disciplinary rulings, disability
placements or other evaluations of a student.
23Right to amend a record
- State law permits students to seek to correct
information in their student education records
which are deemed - Inaccurate
- An unsubstantiated personal conclusion or
inference, - A conclusion or inference outside the observers
area of competence, or - Not based on the personal observations of a named
person with the time and place of the observation
noted - Reference Ed. Code, Section 76232
24Process to amend a record
25The Musts and mays of ferpa
- FERPA dictates that there are things that
institutions must do and things you may do in
order to be in compliance. - MUSTS
- Must obtain written consent from the student
before disclosing any PII - Must disclose education records of the student
(except) - Parental financial information
- Confidential letters to which student has waived
their right to inspection - Education records of other students
26Right to consent to disclosure
- Students have the right to control to whom his or
her education record is released. The college
must keep all written consents on file for a
minimum of three years. - Written consent must
- Specify the records to be released
- State the purpose of the disclosure
- Identify the party or parties to whom disclosure
may be made - Be signed and dated by the student
- There are exceptions.
27When is prior consent not required?
- Institutions may disclose records without consent
if certain requirements are met, but it is not
required to do so. - Some examples
- School officials with a legitimate educational
interest. Employees and legal agents have access
to education records in order to perform their
official, educationally-related duties. (This
must be defined in local policy) - Disclosure to organizations conducting studies to
improve instruction, or to accrediting
organizations. - Disclosure to parents of dependent students (IRS
definition) Parents must file a certification of
dependency e.g. income taxes - Judicial Order or lawfully issued subpoena
28When is prior consent not required? (contd)
- Institutions may disclose records without consent
if certain requirements are met, but it is not
required to do so. - Some examples
- Disclosure of health/safety emergency (must
document what the emergency was and to whom the
information was released.) - Disclosure of directory information, provided the
student has not opt-out of direction
information. - Authorized representatives for audit, evaluation
of federal and state supported programs - Final results of an institutional disciplinary
proceeding who committed a crime of violence or
non-forcible sexual offense (only include name,
violation committed, and any sanction imposed on
the student)
29When is prior consent not required? (contd)
- Solomon Act
- The Act allows military organizations access to
information ordinarily restricted under FERPA for
the purpose of military recruiting. The Solomon
Amendment permits Department of Defense entities
to physically access institutional facilities to
recruit students, and to obtain students' names,
addresses, phone numbers, age, class, and degree
program once every term. Institutions are exempt
from these requirements if they do not collect
this information, or if they do not normally
provide this information to prospective
employers. The Solomon Amendment only applies to
enrolled students over the age 17.
30When is prior consent not required? (contd)
- Solomon Act
- Institutions that violate the Solomon Amendment
risk loss of funding from several federal
agencies, including the Departments of Defense,
Education, Health and Human Services, and Labor.
If a component of the institution violates the
Solomon Amendment, larger system funding may be
affected.
31FERPA and subpoenas
- Subpoenas are commands from a court within your
jurisdiction to produce documents. (Some cases
you may be asked to testify) - Note that some subpoenas (typically grand jury
subpoenas) order districts to not notify the
student that their records are being requested.
32So you got a subpoena
- What to do?
- Review the subpoena to make sure it is legitimate
and enforceable, contact your campus legal
counsel if you have concerns. - Gather the materials specifically requested in
the subpoena. Review those documents and make
sure other PII of other students are redacted. - Must notify the student that this information
will be released to permit them time to contest
the subpoena - This subpoena must be kept as a record of
disclosure
33When is prior consent not required? Financial
Aid
- May disclose PII from education records if the
disclosure is in connection with financial aid
for which the student has applied or has received
and the information is NECESSARY to - determine eligibility for the aid
- determine the amount of the aid
- determine the conditions for the aid, or
- enforce the terms and conditions of the aid.
- For these purposes financial aid is payment of
funds to a student (or in kind payment) that is
conditioned on the students attendance at an
educational agency or institution.
34FERPA and Freedom of information act (FOIA)
- This law gives citizens the right to information
about the affairs of government. - However, this does not give citizens the right to
access student educational records. Student
records are protected by FERPA and their privacy
is not impacted by FOIA. - FOIA does not grant anyone the right to view a
students private educational record.
35Requirements for Compliance
- Institutions must provide an annual notification
to students of their FERPA rights. - Right to Inspect
- Right to amend and challenge
- Opt out of directory information
- Complaint process with US DoE
- Criteria for school officials legitimate
educational interest when disclosing information
without prior consent. - Must provide students access to their education
records (Keep in mind state 15 days vs federal
45 days)
36SPECIFIC ISSUES
37Directory Information Example
- Your college designates name, address, telephone
numbers, email address, and honors and awards
received as directory information. A non-profit
organization that serves disabled students asks
your college for directory information on
students who are enrolled in DSPS. - Can the names and contact information of your
DSPS students be disclosed to the organization as
directory information? - No. You cannot link directory information with an
item that cannot be designated as directory
information, such as disability status.
38Student Learning Outcomes
- Administrators and faculty with a legitimate
educational interest may have access to education
records. Please note that the faculty or staff
must have a reason to access the information in
order to perform their educationally-related
duties.
Good Example
Math Department Chair asking for GPA records for
all students who took MATH-103 and MATH-110 and
if they progressed to Pre-Calculus.
Bad Example
Business Faculty requesting contact and GPA
records for all students who are over the age of
24 and in Intercollegiate sports.
39Ferpa, minors and concurrent enrollment
- Linda, who is 17, is still in high school but is
also taking classes at your college. - Have FERPA rights transferred to Linda?
- Yes.
- Can her parents see the records at your college?
- Not unless an exception allows it, e.g., claiming
little Linda on their income taxes. - Is there another way the parents might see these
records?
40Other examples?
41WHAT ABOUT PARENTS?
When a student reaches the age of 18 or begins
attending a postsecondary institution regardless
of age, FERPA rights transfer to the student.
42Institutions may disclose education records of
students to their parents by any of the
following
- By obtaining the students written consent
- By having the parents establish the students
dependency as defined by Internal Revenue Code - By exercising its disclosure option on any
students under age 21 regarding a violation of an
institutional rule or federal, state, or local
law regarding the use of alcohol or controlled
substance as long as state law permits. - In a health or safety emergency.
43Records Retention and Destruction
44What is records retention
- Records retention is the identification,
classification, storage, retention, and
destruction of records. - Regulations related to records retention
- Title 5, section 59020 to 59041
- Student Accounting Manual Section 4
- Title 5, section 54600
- Education Code, section 76200
45Title 5, Section 59020 to 59041 and SAAM
- Explains what records and documents district are
required by law to prepare or retain. Student
records are part of this section. - Districts must classify documents
- Class 1 Permanent
- Class 2 Optional
- Class 3 Disposable
- Note If a Class 1 document is scanned, imaged,
or microphotographed, then it may be classified
as a Class 3 document for disposal. This process
must be defined in board policy
46Title 5, Section 59020 to 59041 and SAAM
- Class 3 Documents
- May be destroyed after the third year from the
origination of the document - Cannot be destroyed until after the third July
1st date succeeding completion of an audit
required by Ed Code section 84040, or of any
other required audit.
47Sample methods to label documents
48Destruction of education records
- Districts must establish a schedule for the
destruction of education records. - This schedule must be publicized and trained to
all staff that have access to protected records.
Its important that you review and update this
policy on an annual basis.
49Destruction of education records
Source Records Retention Guide by AACRAO
50Destruction of education records
- FERPA does not preclude the destruction of
education records unless a request for access is
pending. - However, state law requires the following student
records to be classified as Class 1 Permanent and
retained indefinitely - records of enrollment and scholarship
- certain claims pertaining to an accident or
injury of a student - (Cal. Code, Regs., tit. 5, 59023(d).)
51Questions?