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| Questions
and Answers about FERPA |
| Updated November 4th, 2007 |
New Brochure from U.S. Department of Education:
Balancing Student Privacy and School Safety: A Guide to FERPA and Colleges |
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1. What is FERPA?
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 protects
the confidentiality of students records. FERPA governs (1) the
release of educational records maintained by the university and
(2) access to these records.
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2. Who is protected under FERPA?
Students who are currently enrolled in Long Island University -
C.W. Post Campus or formerly enrolled regardless of their age or
status in regard to parental dependency. Parents of students termed
"dependent" for income tax purposes may have access to
the student's educational records. The University does not permit
the release of education information of deceased students for 25
years after their death unless authorized by the executor/executrix
of the deceased student's estate or parents, or next of kin, if
an executor/executrix has not been appointed.
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3. What are the rights of a student under the Family Education
Rights and Privacy Act?
- The right to inspect and review the student's education
records within 45 days of the day that the University receives
a request for access
Students should submit to the Office of the Registrar,
written requests that identify the records they wish to inspect.
The University official will make arrangements for access and
notify the student of the time and place where the records may
be inspected. If the records are not maintained by the University
official to whom the request was submitted, that official shall
advise the student of the correct official to whom the request
should be addressed.
- The right to request the amendment of the student's education
records that the student believes are inaccurate or misleading
Students may ask the University to amend a record that
they believe is inaccurate or misleading. They should write the
University official responsible for the record, clearly identify
the part of the record they want changed, and specify why it is
inaccurate or misleading. If the University decides not to amend
the record as requested by the student, the University will notify
the student of the decision and advise the student of his or her
right to a hearing regarding the request for amendment. Additional
information regarding the hearing procedures will be provided
to the student when notified of the right to a hearing.
- The right to consent to disclosure of personally identifiable
information contained in the student's education records, except
to the extent that FERPA authorizes disclosure without consent
One exception which permits disclosure without consent
is disclosure to school officials with legitimate educational
interests. A school official is a person employed by the University
in an administrative, supervisory, academic or research, or support
staff position (including law enforcement unit personnel and health
staff); a person or company with whom the University has contracted
(such as an attorney, auditor, or collection agent); a person
serving on the Board of Regents; or a student serving on an official
committee, such as a disciplinary or grievance committee, or assisting
another school official in performing his or her tasks. A school
official has a legitimate educational interest if the official
needs to review an education record in order to fulfill his or
her professional responsibility. Upon request the University discloses
education records without consent to officials of another school
in which a student seeks or intends to enroll.
- The right to file a complaint with the U.S. Department
of Education concerning alleged failures by the C. W. Post Campus
of Long Island University to comply with the requirements of FERPA.
The name and address of the Office that administers FERPA is:
Family Policy Compliance Office
U.S. Department of Education
600 Independence Avenue, SW.
Washington, D.C. 20202-4605
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4. What are Educational Records?
Educational records are those records, files, documents or other
materials which contain information directly related to a student
and that are maintained by any employee or an agent of the college.
Educational Records DO NOT Include:
- Records made by college personnel that are the sole possession
of the maker and not revealed to any other person.
- Records maintained by the College Police for law enforcement
purposes.
- Counseling and medical records.
- Alumni records.
- Employment records relating to an individual who is employed
by the college not as a result of their status as a student.
- Records of individuals who have applied to the college, but
have not attended.
- Directory information
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5. What does FERPA say about the rights of parents regarding
student records?
At the Postsecondary level, parents have no inherent rights to
inspect a student's education records. The right to inspect is limited
solely to the student. Records may be released to parents only if
one of the following conditions have been met:
1. through the written consent of the student.
2. in compliance with a subpoena.
3. in connection with some health or safety issues.
4. by submission of evidence that the parent declare the student
as a dependent on their most recent Federal Income Tax form.
Long Island University is not required to disclose information
from the student's education records to any parent of a dependent
student. However, it may exercise its discretion to do so.
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6. At Long Island University, C.W. Post Campus, what is considered
Directory Information? How can a student request that directory
information be withheld?
The following items are designated "Directory Information" and
may be released at the discretion of the C.W. Post Campus of Long
Island University. Students may request that directory information
not be disclosed by completing an "Authorizaion to Withhold
Directory Information" form and returning it to the Office
of the Registrar or the Office of Student Affairs. Please consider
carefully the consequences of this decision. Should you decide
not to release any of the information, any request for such information
from Long Island University will be refused.
- Name
- Dates of Attendance
- Enrollment Status
- Date and Place of Birth
- Class
- Major
- Awards
- Honors
- Degrees conferred
- Past and present participation in officially recognized
sports and non-curricular activities
- Physical factors (height, weight) of athletes
- Previous educational institutions most recently
attended
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7. What are some of the circumstances in which personally identifiable
information will be disclosed by the University?
Answer:
- Prior consent of student
- To authorized representatives of the following government entities:
-Comptroller General of the United States
- Secretary of Education
- U.S. Attorney General for law enforcement purposes
- To agents acting on behalf of the institution (e.g. National
Student Clearinghouses)
- To parents of a dependent student
- To comply with a judicial order or subpoena
- "Student Recruiting Information" to military recruiters
for recruiting purposes only (Solomon Amendment). Student recruiting
information is name, address, telephone listing, age (or year
of birth), level of education, and major
- To authorized representatives of the Department of Veterans
Affairs for students receiving educational assistance from the
agency
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8. What are the steps for students wishing to release information
to their parents on a one-time basis only/or permanent basis?
Answer: Students wishing to grant permission for release of student records
to parents on a one-time or permanent basis must complete the apprpriate
form. See approved forms section of this webpage below.
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9. What does FERPA restrict? |
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Answer: FERPA limits the disclosure of information from student “education records,” a term that the law defines quite broadly and that is not limited to “academic” records.
“Education records” include virtually all records maintained by an educational institution, in any format, that are “directly related” to one or more of its past or present students . A record is “directly related” to a student if it is “personally identifiable” to the student, and a record is “personally identifiable” to a student not only if it expressly identifies the student on its face but also if the student's identity could be deduced from the demographic, descriptive, or other information the record contains, either alone or in combination with other publicly available information. Thus, “education records” include not only registrar's office records, transcripts, papers, exams and the like, but also non-academic student information database systems class schedules , financial aid records financial account records disability accommodation records, disciplinary records and even “unofficial” files, photographs, e-mail messages, hand-scrawled Post-it notes, and records that are publicly available elsewhere or that the student herself has publicly disclosed.
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10. When may information from education records be disclosed? |
Answer: In general, information derived from a student's education records may be disclosed only if: (1) it is “directory information;” (2) the student has consented to the disclosure; or (3) the law provides an exception that permits disclosure without the student's consent.
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11. May information from student education records be shared with others on campus? |
Answer: Yes. Under one of FERPA's many exceptions to the general prohibition against disclosure, campus personnel are free to share information from student education records with other “school officials” who have “legitimate educational interests” in the information. Each institution must define for itself who qualifies as a “school official” and what is a “legitimate educational interest” and give annual notice of its definitions to its students. These definitions can be quite broad – “school officials” need not be limited to “officers,” or even to employees, and “legitimate educational interests” (much like “education records”) need not be limited either to “academic” interests or to instances that are beneficial to the student. The Family Policy Compliance Office (“FPCO”), the office within the U.S. Department of Education charged with overseeing and enforcing FERPA, offers the following model definitions:
A school official is a person employed by the University in an administrative, supervisory, academic or research, or support staff position (including law enforcement unit personnel and health staff); a person or company with whom the University has contracted as its agent to provide a service instead of using University employees or officials (such as an attorney, auditor, or collection agent); a person serving on the Board of Trustees; or a student serving on an official committee, such as a disciplinary or grievance committee, or assisting another school official in performing his or her tasks.
A school official has a legitimate educational interest if the official needs to review an education record in order to fulfill his or her professional responsibilities for the University.
At institutions that follow these or similar models, an employee concerned that a student's statements or behavior evidence a potential threat could – and should – share relevant information with the dean of students, the judicial affairs office, the campus counseling center, the campus law enforcement unit, or other appropriate “school officials” whose job it is to deal with such issues.
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12. May information from a student's education records be disclosed to protect health or safety? |
Answer: Yes. FERPA permits the disclosure of information from student education records “to appropriate parties in connection with an emergency if knowledge of the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the student or other individuals.” For example, if a student sends an e-mail to his resident assistant saying that he has just been diagnosed with a highly contagious disease such as measles, the institution could alert the student's roommate, and perhaps others with whom the student has come in close contact, to urge them to seek appropriate testing and medical care. Safety concerns warranting disclosure could include a student's suicidal statements or ideations, unusually erratic and angry behaviors, or similar conduct that others would reasonably see as posing a risk of serious harm.
This exception does not authorize “knee-jerk” or (in most cases) “broadcast” disclosures, but a limited disclosure to a limited number of people, made on the basis of a good-faith determination in light of the facts available at the time, and is highly unlikely to be deemed a violation of FERPA, even if the perceived emergency later turns out, in hindsight, not to have been one. In general, and when reasonably possible, the initial disclosure should be made to professionals trained to evaluate and handle such emergencies, such as campus mental health or law enforcement personnel, who can then determine whether further and broader disclosures are appropriate.
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13. When may a college or university disclose information from a student's education records to the student's parent or legal guardian? |
Answer: Once a student is in attendance at a postsecondary institution, all rights provided by FERPA rest with the student, even if the student is younger than 18 years old . Education record information may therefore be disclosed to the parent of a college or university student only with the student's consent or in instances in which one of the exceptions to FERPA permits disclosure. In addition to the other exceptions discussed in this Note, two such exceptions specifically address communications to parents.
First, FERPA permits (but does not require) disclosures of any or all education record information to a student's parents if the student is their dependent for federal tax purposes. To rely on this exception, the institution must verify the student's dependent status, normally either by asking the student for confirmation or by asking the parents for a copy of the relevant portion of their most recent tax return.
Second, an institution may (but again is not required to) provide information to a parent or legal guardian regarding any violation of law or of an institutional rule or policy governing the use or possession of alcohol or a controlled substance, if the institution has determined that the student committed a disciplinary violation with respect to such use or possession and the student is under the age of 21 at the time of both the violation and the disclosure.
These exceptions, like the other FERPA exceptions, are independent of each other. Thus, an institution may notify parents about a 19-year-old student's underage drinking violations even if the student is not their tax dependent, and may likewise notify the parents of a 22-year-old student's drug violations if the student is their tax dependent. Similarly, the situation need not rise to the level of a health or safety emergency in order for either of these exceptions to apply.
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14. What about disclosing information from the student discipline process, either to others on campus or to other institutions? |
Answer: FERPA expressly permits institutions to include in a student's education records appropriate information concerning disciplinary action taken against the student for conduct that posed a significant risk to the safety or well being of that student, other students, or other members of the community . Such information may be disclosed to any “school officials” who have “legitimate educational interests” in the behavior of the student, and it also may be disclosed as appropriate under the health and safety emergency exception. FERPA also expressly provides that, for purposes of the health and safety emergency exception, the “appropriate parties” to whom disclosure may be made include teachers and officials at other institutions who have legitimate educational interests in the behavior of the student.
In a separate (and again independent) exception, FERPA further permits institutions to disclose to anyone the final results of a disciplinary proceeding conducted against a student who is an alleged perpetrator of a crime of violence or a nonforcible sex offense, if the institution determines as a result of that disciplinary proceeding that the student committed a violation of the institution's own rules or policies with respect to such crime or offense. Yet another exception permits institutions to disclose the final results of such a proceeding to the victim regardless of whether the alleged perpetrator was found to be in violation of the institution's rules or policies. For purposes of these two exceptions, “final results” is limited to the name of the student who is an alleged perpetrator of a crime of violence, the violation found to have been committed, and any sanction imposed against the student by the institution .
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15. Are there other circumstances in which a college or university may disclose information from student education records to another institution without the student's consent? |
Answer: In addition to the exceptions discussed above, FERPA expressly permits the disclosure of information from a student's education records to officials of other institutions at which the student seeks or intends to enroll. To take advantage of this exception, the institution must either inform its students generally, in its annual FERPA notice, of its practice of doing so , or make a reasonable attempt to notify the individual student that it has done so. In either case, upon request, the institution also must provide the student with a copy of the disclosed records and give the student an opportunity for a hearing to challenge the content of the disclosed records .
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16. Is the disclosure of campus law enforcement unit records restricted by FERPA? |
Answer: No. Records that are created by the campus law enforcement unit (whether commissioned police or non-commissioned security) at least in part for a law enforcement purpose are not “education records” and, at least as far as FERPA is concerned, may be shared freely with anyone the institution, in its discretion, deems appropriate. For example, FERPA would not prevent a campus law enforcement unit from disclosing to external law enforcement agencies an incident report concerning the unit's response to a student's threatening statements or behavior. However, any copies of that report that are shared with other campus offices would become subject to FERPA, though the original in the law enforcement unit would continue not to be. Moreover, any student education records that other campus offices share with the campus law enforcement unit, as “school officials” with a “legitimate educational interest,” remain subject to FERPA even in the hands of that unit.
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17. What if the institution receives a court order or subpoena requesting student records? |
Answer: The institution may disclose records in response to a judicial order or lawfully issued subpoena but generally must notify the student of the order or subpoena before complying. An exception to this general rule is that a federal grand jury subpoena or other subpoena issued for a law enforcement purpose may instruct the institution not to notify the student.
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18. May an employee disclose personal knowledge and impressions about a student, based on the employee's personal interactions with the student? |
Answer: Yes. FERPA's disclosure restrictions apply only to information derived from student education records, not to personal knowledge derived from direct, personal experience with a student. For example, a faculty or staff member who personally observes a student engaging in erratic and threatening behavior is not prohibited by FERPA from disclosing that observation. (If at some point the employee describes the observation in a personally identifiable record, that record would be subject to FERPA protections. The employee would still be permitted to disclose the personal observation but would not be permitted to disclose the record of the observation unless one of the exceptions to FERPA applied or the student consented to the disclosure). Again, however, the employee generally should limit disclosure of such information to professionals trained to evaluate and manage it, as other privacy laws conceivably could apply and prohibit broader disclosures, depending upon the circumstances.
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19. What other laws protect student privacy? |
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Answer: Students may have additional privacy rights under state privacy and confidentiality laws and under federal laws such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (“HIPAA”). Moreover, certain professionals on campus, such as medical and mental health care providers, may be bound by professional obligations of confidentiality that require a higher burden to be met (such as a significant threat of serious and imminent harm to a specifically foreseeable victim) before disclosure of information in their possession may be made. Even when this is the case, however, other personnel on campus (such as a faculty member, dean of students or residential life employee) may disclose information about a student under the lower FERPA health and safety emergency standard if the circumstances warrant.
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20. What should a college or university employee do if he or she is concerned about a student? |
Answer: If the concern is that a student may engage in violent behavior, toward self or others, and the threat appears to be imminent, the employee should contact the campus police or security office immediately.
When circumstances reasonably permit, the employee should consult with professionals on campus or associated with the institution who may be able to assess the potential threat, identify resources for the student, and provide information that could assist in deciding on an appropriate course of action. In consultation with appropriate campus resources, a collective decision may then be made to contact a family member, an appropriate off-campus resource or others. FERPA would not present an obstacle to any of these disclosures. |
USEFUL LINKS
Family
Policy Compliance Office
Office
of Post Secondary Education
FERPA
for Students
FERPA
for Parents |
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APPROVED FORMS
The following forms are available online for the convenience of
students:
Regardless of the form being submitted, it must be returned to
the Office of the Registrar. These forms represent the official
document required for submission. Hand-written letters releasing
or withholding information will not be accepted as
official requests. All requests must be notarized.
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| If you have any questions regarding your rights under FERPA, please
contact the Records Office, 516-299-2756 or email your comments
to the Registrar |
Office of Records and
Registration
C.W. Post Campus, Long Island University
720 Northern Boulevard, Brookville, NY 11548
Phone 516-299-2756 | Fax 516-299-2330
Email registra@cwpost.liu.edu |
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