ACT: Refers to the Family
Educational Rights and Privacy act of 1974, as Amended , enacted as Section
438 of the General Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g)
AGENT: A person or
business formally authorized to act on another's behalf.
ATTENDANCE: Includes but
is not limited to (a) attendance - in person or by correspondence study
(program) and (b) the period during which a person is working under a
work-study (cooperative) program.
DATES OF ATTENDANCE: The
period of time during which a student attends or attended an institution.
Examples of dates of attendance include an academic year, a spring semester,
or a first quarter. The term does not include specific daily records or a
student's attendance pattern at the institution.
DIRECTORY INFORMATION:
Information contained in an education record of a student that generally
would not be considered harmful or an invasion of privacy if disclosed. It
includes, but is not limited to, the student's name, address, telephone
listing, electronic mail address, photograph, date and place of birth, major
field of study, dates of attendance, grade level, enrollment status (e.g.,
undergraduate or graduate; full-time or part-time), participation in
officially recognized activities and sports, weight and height of members of
athletic teams, degrees, honors and awards received, and most recent
education agency or institution attended.
NOTE: Items that can not be
identified as directory information are a student's social security number,
citizenship, gender, religious preference, grades, and GPA.
EDUCATION INSTITUTION (OR AGENCY):
Generally means (1) any public or private agency or institution
(including governing boards which provide administrative control or
direction of a university system) of post-secondary education that (2)
receives funds from any federal program under the administrative
responsibility of the Secretary of Education. The term refers to the
institution as a whole, including all of its components (e.g., schools or
departments in a university).
EDUCATION RECORDS:
Those records directly related to a student and maintained by the
institution or by a party acting for the institution.
The term "education records" does
not
include the following:
-
records of institutional,
supervisory, administrative, and certain educational personnel which are
in the sole possession of the maker and are not accessible or revealed to
any other individual except a substitute who performs on a temporary basis
(as defined in the institutional personnel policy) the duties of the
individual who made the records.
-
records maintained by a law
enforcement unit of the education agency or institution that were created
by that law enforcement unit for the purpose of law enforcement.
-
records relating to individuals who
are employed by the institution which are made and maintained in the
normal course of business, relate exclusively to individuals in their
capacity as employees, and are not available for use for any other
purpose. (Records of individuals in attendance at an institution who are
employed as a result of their status as students are education records,
e.g.; work-study, graduate assistants.)
-
records relating to a student (see
the definition of "eligible student" ) which are (1) created or maintained
by a physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or other recognized
professional or paraprofessional acting in his or her professional
capacity or assisting in a paraprofessional capacity; (2) used solely in
connection with the provision of treatment to the student; and (3) not
disclosed to anyone other than individuals providing such treatment, so
long as the records can be personally reviewed by a physician or other
appropriate professional of the student's choice. (Appropriateness may be
determined by the institution.) "Treatment" in this context does not
include remedial educational activities or activities which are part of
the program of instruction at the institution.
-
records of an institution which
contain only information relating to a person after that person is no
longer a student at the institution (e.g., information gathered on the
accomplishments of alumni).
"ELIGIBLE STUDENT": Means
a student who has reached 18 years of age or is attending an institution of
post-secondary education.
ENROLLED STUDENT:
For the purposes of this publication, this term refers to
a student who has satisfied all of the institutional requirements for
attendance at the institution. The Family Policy Compliance Office has
stated that each institution may determine when a student is "in attendance"
in accordance with its own enrollment procedures (Federal Register, July 6,
2000, p.41856). At PLNU, a student is considered "enrolled" when the student
has registered and attended his or her first class.
FAMILY POLICY COMPLIANCE OFFICE:
The office within the U.S. Department of Education that is responsible for
enforcing/administering the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of
1974, as Amended. This office has responsibility for FERPA at all levels of
education (K-12, post-secondary).
"FINAL RESULTS" OF A DISCIPLINARY
PROCEEDING: A decision or determination, made by an honor court or
council, committee, commission, or other entity authorized to resolve
disciplinary matters within the institution. The disclosure of final results
must include only the name of the student, the violation committed, and any
sanction imposed by the institution against the student.
"IN ATTENDANCE": (or when
is a student "in attendance"?): See "enrolled student."
INSTITUTION OF POSTSECONDARY
EDUCATION: An institution that provides education to students
beyond the secondary school level. "Secondary school level" means the
educational level (not beyond grade 12) at which secondary education is
provided.
LAW ENFORCEMENT UNIT: Any
individual or other component of an institution, including commissioned
police officers and noncommissioned security guards, officially authorized
by the institution to enforce any local, state, or federal law and to
maintain the physical security and safety of the institution. (Although the
unit may perform other non-law enforcement functions, it does not lose its
status as a law enforcement unit.)
LAW ENFORCEMENT UNIT RECORDS:
Those records, files, documents, and other materials that are (1) created by
a law enforcement unit, (2) created for a law enforcement purpose, and (3)
maintained by the law enforcement unit. Law enforcement records do not
include: (1) records created by a law enforcement unit for a law enforcement
purpose other than for the law enforcement unit; (2) records created and
maintained by a law enforcement unit exclusively for non-law enforcement
purposes, such as a disciplinary action or proceeding conducted by the
institution.
LEGITIMATE EDUCATIONAL INTEREST:
The demonstrated "need to know" by those officials of an
institution who act in the student's educational interest, including
faculty, administration, clerical and professional employees, and other
persons, including student employees or agents, who manage student record
information. (Although the Act does not define "legitimate educational
interest", it states that institutions must establish their own criteria,
according to their own procedures and requirements, for determining when
their school officials have a legitimate educational interest in a student's
education records.
PARENT: Includes a
natural parent, a guardian, or an individual acting as a parent in the
absence of a parent or a guardian.
PERSONALLY IDENTIFIABLE: Data
or information which include (1) the name of the student, the student's
parents, or other family members; (2) the student's address; (3) a personal
identifier such as a social security number or student number; or (4) a list
of personal characteristics or other information which would make the
student's identity easily traceable.
RECORDS: Any information
or data recorded in any medium (e.g., handwriting, print, tapes, film,
microfilm, microfiche, any form of electronic data storage).
SCHOOL OFFICIALS: Those
members of an institution who act in the student's educational interest
within the limitations of their "need to know." These may include faculty,
administration, clerical and professional employees and other persons,
including student employees or agents, who manage student education record
information. (Although the Act does not define "school officials," it states
that institutions must establish their own criteria , according to their own
procedures and requirements, for determining them. This is a recommended
definition.)
SOLE POSSESSION RECORDS:
Records that are kept in the sole possession of the maker, are used only as
a personal memory aid, and are not accessible or revealed to any other
person except a temporary substitute for the maker of the record.
Any record that is made in conjunction
with a student or other school official is not a sole possession record.
STUDENT: Any individual
for whom an education institution maintains education records. The term does
not include an individual who has never attended the institution. An
individual who is or has been enrolled in one component unit of an
institution and who applies for admission to a second unit has no right to
inspect the records accumulated by the second unit until enrolled therein.
STUDENT RIGHT-TO-KNOW ACT OF 1990:
Referred to in this publication as SRTK, the act requires colleges and
universities to report graduation rates to current and prospective students.
SUBPOENA: A command from
a court to require the person named in the subpoena to appear at a stated
time and place to provide testimony or evidence. There are two main types of
subpoenas: "duces tecum" (requires the production of documents, papers, or
other tangibles) and "ad testificandum" (requires person to testify in a
particular court case).
U.S.C.: United States
Code. A compilation of all federal legislation organized into 50 titles.
Revised every six years with supplementary volumes issued in intervening
years. The legislation related to FERPA is found in 20 U.S.C. 1232g (see
Appendix I).