Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA) is a Federal law that helps protect the privacy of student education records. The Act provides students the right to inspect and review education records, the right to seek to amend those records, and the right to limit disclosure of information from the records. The intent of the legislation is to protect the rights of students and to ensure the privacy and accuracy of education records. The Act applies to all institutions that are recipients of federal aid administered by the Secretary of Education.
There are several exceptions to FERPA’s general consent requirement, some of which are described below. Under these exceptions, the University is permitted to disclose personally identifiable information from education records to a third party without consent.
- A school official is a person employed by the University in an administrative, supervisory, academic, research, or support staff position (including university police and student health); a person or company with whom the University has contracted (such as an attorney, auditor, or collection agent); a person serving on the governing board; 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.
- Directory information is the information in the education record that generally would not be considered harmful or an invasion of privacy if disclosed. Directory information includes the student's:
- name,
- address,
- telephone listing,
- electronic mail address,
- photograph,
- date and place of birth,
- major field of study,
- participation in officially recognized activities and sports,
- dates of attendance,
- enrollment status,
- degrees, honors and awards received,
- expected graduation date,
- planned post-completion placement (e. g. AAMC match), and
- the most recent educational agency or institution attended by the student.
A student who does not want any or all of the above listed information to be released must submit a written request to the Office of the Registrar no later than the 10th day of the academic term.
- Is filed, in writing, by an eligible student who maintains FERPA rights over the education records that are the subject of the complaint;
- Is submitted to SPPO within 180 days of the date of the alleged violation or of the date that the eligible student knew or reasonably should have known of the alleged violation; and
- Contains specific allegations of fact giving reasonable cause to believe that a violation of FERPA has occurred.
More information regarding SPPO's complaint process is available at https://studentprivacy.ed.gov/file-a-complaint.