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- Questions and Answers
- for
- School Staff
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- The Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)
- The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) as amended
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- YES! Any school that receives federal or state education funds must
comply with all privacy acts.
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- Yes. Under both state and federal requirements, districts are required
to establish and implement written policies and procedures.
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- Confidentially means protecting all personally identifiable data,
information, and records collected, used, or kept by the school district
about a student.
- Confidentially requirements also
apply to discussions about a student and the student's record.
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- Only discuss student information in an IEP meeting or with other
educators at school who have direct contact with the student.
- Never discuss a student’s disability or school performance outside of
school.
- Never discuss a student’s disability or school performance in general
conversation anywhere (including at school).
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- Discuss ONLY the student the meeting is about.
- NEVER mention the names, disabilities, or performance of any other
student.
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- Personally identifiable information includes:
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• student or family names and address,
• student social security or student number,
• descriptions that would make it easy to identify the student,
and
• anything else that would make it easy to identify the student.
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- An educational record, which is sometimes called a "school
record" or "permanent record", is anything that the
district collects, uses, or maintains relating to individual students.
This includes grades, health information, attendance reports, work
papers, school photos, test results, etc. Data or information may be
handwritten, drawn, or typed. It may also be a photograph, on audio or
video tape, or on computer disk.
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- No, but school staff must be able to tell parents the locations of all
information about their child.
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- Each school district has someone responsible for student record
confidentiality. Also, school staff who collect, use, or maintain school
records receive training in confidentially, including making sure that
parents see only information about their child.
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- Only parents and certain others have the right to look at or obtain a
copy of a student's record without parental consent. The others include:
- School staff listed on the
district's current list of persons allowed access to student
information, including student teachers, classroom aides, and teacher
assistants;
- Staff from US and state department of education on official business;
and
- Another school district's staff when the student transfers.
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- Both parents have the legal right to see their child's record unless the
school has been told a parent is not allowed because of some legal
action such as a divorce decree.
- Guardians and persons appointed to act as surrogate parents also have
the same rights.
- If a child with a disability is under foster care, the foster parents
have the right to review and inspect the school records of the child.
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- A student is eligible to obtain access to his or her own records upon
reaching the 18th birthday. The school district notifies parents at
least one year before the student's 18th birthday that the rights they
have as a parent will transfer to their child on the child's 18th
birthday, unless the school district receives evidence that a court
order or legal document proves the parent is the child's guardian or
representative in educational matters.
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- Yes. Professionals or employees of agencies under contract to the
district who work with a student may obtain access the same as school
employees.
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- Parents may see the following kinds of information that a school
district might keep:
- personal and family information;
- testing information;
- medical, psychological, and anecdotal reports;
- achievement and progress reports;
- records of conferences with a student or parent;
- copies of correspondence about the student;
- other information that is helpful to the school in working with the
student.
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- The school does not have to disclose:
- teacher or counselor personal
notes;
- school security police records,
or
- personnel records of school
employees.
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- No. A parent is entitled only to a copy of the student record.
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- Schools may charge a reasonable fee, such as ten cents per page.
However, a district may not charge a fee if charging a fee would prevent
the parent from exercising the right to inspect and review the record.
The fee may not include the cost of locating and filing a record.
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- Yes. Each district keeps a record of access with each student's record
which includes the name of the party accessing the record, the date the
information was disclosed, and why the person was allowed to look at the
record.
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- A district may release the following information without prior consent:
student name, address, telephone number, date and place of birth, major
field of study, dates of attendance, class, participation in officially
recognized activities and sports, degrees, honors, and awards, and post-
high school plans. However, before the district releases this types of
information it must give public notice that it releases these types of
information and it must inform parents that they have the right to
request that this information not be released without prior consent.
This may be included in the district's annual public notice about
confidentially.
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- Yes, if the board's attorney is acting as an authorized agent of the
district in connection with the enforcement of federal and state
education laws (e.g., in relation to legal proceedings such as a due
process hearing).
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- Yes. School personnel are required to report cases of suspected abuse
to DSS and to disclose any information relevant to an investigation of
suspected abuse or neglect.
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- Yes. Discipline may only be transmitted to other school
districts/agencies to the same extent that it is transmitted for student
without disabilities. If the
disciplinary records are transmitted, a copy of the student’s current
IEP must be included.
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- School personnel must make a
reasonable effort to notify the parent before complying with a lawfully
issued subpoena or court order.
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- When information is sent to
others, the school district must list the people and agencies who
receive the information and tell why the record is needed to help with
the education of the student.
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- When a parent believes that
information in the student's record is inaccurate or misleading, the
parent may ask the school district to change the record. The school
district then has up to forty-five days to decide what to do and notify
the parent of its decision.
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- The parent may request a record amendment hearing. If a parent requests
such a hearing on the student’s record, the district will hold one. The
hearing is conducted by an impartial due process hearing officer
procured by the district. A decision is given in writing no later than 5
calendar days after the hearing.
- If the decision is that the
district does not have to change the record, then the parent has the
right to put a statement in the record telling why s/he thinks the
information is not right. This statement is kept as long as the
disagreed upon part is kept. If that part of the record is shown or sent
to anyone, the statement is also
included.
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- The district notifies the parent when the student's record is no longer
needed to provide educational services. The district may choose to
destroy the records at this time, if they are no longer needed for
administrative purposes. The parent may have a copy of the student's
record before it is destroyed. However, the district may keep basic
information about the student as long as it is needed. This information
includes student's name, address, telephone number, attendance record,
classes attended, grade level completed, and year completed.
- Also, after a student's record is longer needed to provide educational
services to the student and if the parent requests, the school will
destroy the student's record. But, the district must remind the parent
that this information may be
needed later for social security benefits or other reasons.
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- The district may maintain records indefinitely. They may be destroyed
five years after they are no longer needed to provide an education to a
student or to document compliance with state and federal program
requirements. Parents or eligible students must be notified in writing
before records are destroyed.
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- Director of Special Services
- Office of Special Services
- The School District of Edgefield County
- (803) 275-4601
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