Our intention with this page is to clearly explain the "Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, as Amended," known generally as "FERPA" or "The Buckley Amendment." This information references directly the FERPA page on ed.gov at the following link:
FERPA is the United States federal law that protects student records privacy review and disclosure rights. This is a Federal law that is administered by the Family Policy Compliance Office (Office) in the U.S. Department of Education (Department). The law guarantees these rights for both current and former 日韩AV students. To help you understand FERPA and what it means to you, this page addresses a variety of records privacy questions.
The term "education records" is defined as those records that contain information directly related to a student and which are maintained by an educational agency or institution or by a party acting for the agency or institution. At 日韩AV your student records are filed and maintained by the following offices and departments.
Location of Record | Record Type |
---|---|
Office of the Registrar | Academic records (all schools) |
Office of Admissions (School of Graduate Studies & Research and Theological Seminary.) | Admissions records |
Office of Human Resources | Student employment records |
Office of Student Financial Services | Student account records |
Division of Student Life | Student Life records |
Counseling & Testing Center | Achievement and Intelligence test scores, Interest inventory and Personality test scores |
Department of Instruction | Official folder of records, if one is kept |
University Schools (Ruth Murdoch Elementary and Andrews Academy) | Academic records, Admission records (except medical records), Student Life records |
As a student, your educational records are considered confidential. Under most circumstances your records will not be released without your written and signed consent. As an 日韩AV student, you must sign a release form in order for your information to be released to your parents.
Once a student reaches 18 years of age or attends a postsecondary institution, he or she becomes an "eligible student," and all rights formerly given to parents under FERPA transfer to the student. The eligible student has the following rights:
FERPA generally prohibits the improper disclosure of personally identifiable information derived from education records. Thus, information that an official obtained through personal knowledge or observation, or has heard orally from others, is not protected under FERPA. This remains applicable even if education records exist which contain that information, unless the official had an official role in making a determination that generated a protected education record.
Under FERPA, a school must provide an eligible student with an opportunity to inspect and review his or her education records within 45 days following its receipt of a request. A school is required to provide an eligible student with copies of education records, or make other arrangements, if a failure to do so would effectively prevent the student from obtaining access to the records. A case in point would be a situation in which the student does not live within commuting distance of the school.
A school is not generally required by FERPA to provide an eligible student with access to academic calendars, course syllabi, or general notices such as announcements of specific events or extra-curricular activities. That type of information is not generally directly related to an individual student and, therefore, does not meet the definition of an education record.
Under FERPA, a school is not required to provide information that is not maintained or to create education records in response to an eligible student's request. Accordingly, a school is not required to provide an eligible student with updates on his or her progress in a course (including grade reports) or in school unless such information already exists in the form of an education record.
Under FERPA, an eligible student has the right to request that inaccurate or misleading information in his or her education records be amended. While a school is not required to amend education records in accordance with an eligible student's request, the school is required to consider the request. If the school decides not to amend a record in accordance with an eligible student's request, the school must inform the student of his or her right to a hearing on the matter. If, as a result of the hearing, the school still decides not to amend the record, the eligible student has the right to insert a statement in the record setting forth his or her views. That statement must remain with the contested part of the eligible student's record for as long as the record is maintained.
However, while the FERPA amendment procedure may be used to challenge facts that are inaccurately recorded, it may NOT be used to challenge a grade, an opinion, or a substantive decision made by a school about an eligible student.
FERPA was intended to require only that schools conform to fair recordkeeping practices and not to override the accepted standards and procedures for making academic assessments, disciplinary rulings, or placement determinations. Thus, while FERPA affords eligible students the right to seek to amend education records which contain inaccurate information, this right cannot be used to challenge a grade or an individual's opinion, or a substantive decision made by a school about a student. Additionally, if FERPA's amendment procedures are not applicable to an eligible student's request for amendment of education records, the school is not required under FERPA to hold a hearing on the matter.
Personally identifiable information is defined as information such as name, address, social security number, or personal characteristics which would make the student's identity traceable.
FERPA gives institutions the right to define certain pieces of information as "directory information," or information for which the institution does not need the student's consent to release it. 日韩AV has classified the following as directory information: name, local address, local telephone number, 日韩AV email address, gender, marital status, hometown, date and place of birth, school, academic program (degree, major and minor), enrollment status, class standing/classification (i.e., freshman, sophomore, junior, senior or graduate), participation in officially recognized activities, dates of attendance, degree(s) received, honors and awards and photographs.
Under FERPA, a school may not generally disclose personally identifiable information from an eligible student's education records to a third party unless the eligible student has provided written consent. However, there are a number of exceptions to FERPA's prohibition against non-consensual disclosure of personally identifiable information from education records. Under these exceptions, schools are permitted to disclose personally identifiable information from education records without consent, though they are not required to do so.
General Information Regarding These Exceptions
A school must inform eligible students of how it defines the terms "school official" and "legitimate educational interest" in its annual notification of FERPA rights. A school official generally has a legitimate educational interest if the official needs to review an education record in order to fulfill his or her professional responsibility. "
What if my mom or dad calls the Records office to ask about me, such as with a transcript request?
If a student is under the age of 18, parents are permitted to receive information as defined by FERPA. Under the stipulations of FERPA, the Office of Academic Records is not permitted to disclose information with parents about students age 18 or older unless the student has submitted the FERPA release of information form. Upon calling Academic Records with a question about their student, our staff will check iVue for confirmation that the form has been submitted. Please note that this does not mean, as according to the disclosure exceptions listed above, that we are obligated to disclose all information with any third party who has permission but may only release general information.
What if my parent wants to find out my grades for me?
Grades are only accessible within the student's Vault account or by directly contacting the instructor. Students are advised to directly contact their professor if they have questions about their grade, or if the grade has not been submitted. Student-parent communication is the best way for parents to find out the grades of their student. The student may also add academic or financial proxies which allows important family members to view aspects of the students’ education record.
Do my parents have the right to see my educational records if they are paying the bill?
Under FERPA the rights of the parents to review and amend educational records transfer to the student once they turn 18 years old. Although the rights under FERPA have now transferred to you, a school may disclose information from an “eligible student’s” education records to your parents, without your consent, if your parents claimed you as a dependent for tax purposes in the last year's tax return. Neither the age of the student nor the parent’s status as a custodial parent is relevant. If you are claimed as a dependent by either of your parents for tax purposes, then either parent may have access under this provision.