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Student
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Parent
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Teacher
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Administrative
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Confidentiality and Security of student data
Each
and every employee who has access to student data is
individually responsible, by Federal law, for the
confidentiality and security of that data. The Family
Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA),
20 United States Code § 1232g; 34 CFR Part 99, states “schools must have written
permission from the parent or eligible student in order to
release any information from a student's education record”, a
regulation enacted by the U.S.
House of Representatives on August 6th, 2004
that leaves little room for interpretation.
In addition to
FERPA, The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
is a separate Federal regulation that applies similar
restrictions to a subset of education records of students with
disabilities, over and above
FERPA.
We are therefore, publicly and legally accountable for
our practices and actions. It is extremely important that
every employee share in the responsibility to protect student
records from unauthorized access and alteration. I can not
stress strongly enough how we must remain mindful that this
confidentiality extends beyond the physical security of paper
records or computer access, but also includes our
conversations with friends and family that might violate the
privacy of a particular student or group of students.
Do not discuss, share in writing or be negligent with
student grades, attendance, discipline, test scores,
demographic information, or any other student data, unless you
have appropriated and can produce written authorization to do
so. Every employee will be held individually responsible for
strictly adhering to these Federal
regulations.
Keith
Palmer Director of Technology Gainesville City
Schools
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