When a student turns eighteen or enters college (whichever comes first), all privacy rights transfer from parent to student. Understanding these changes and making informed decisions about college information sharing is a crucial—but often overlooked—part of college preparation. This guide explains what you can expect and provides frameworks for having a conversation between parents and students about privacy, access, and legal authority.
FERPA: Understanding Educational Privacy Rights
What Is FERPA?
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) is a federal law that protects the privacy of student education records. When a student turns eighteen or attends a postsecondary institution at any age, all privacy rights transfer from parents to the student.
What This Means in Practice:
- Colleges cannot release education records to parents without student consent
- Parents cannot access grades, class schedules, or disciplinary records
- Financial aid information becomes private, even if parents are paying
- Health center and counseling records are protected
- College staff may refuse to discuss student matters with parents
Information Protected by FERPA:
- Grades/transcripts
- Class schedules
- Financial aid details
- Academic standing
- Disciplinary records
- Housing information
- Course registration
- Billing information
FERPA Waivers: Providing Parental Access
What Is a FERPA Waiver?
A FERPA waiver is a voluntary authorization signed by a student that grants specific individuals (typically parents) access to otherwise protected educational records.
Important Characteristics of FERPA Waivers:
- Voluntary: Students cannot be forced to sign
- Specific: Can be limited to certain information
- Revocable: Students can cancel at any time
- Variable: Each college has its own process and forms
How to Access and Complete FERPA Waivers:
- Look for FERPA release forms on the college's website (typically in the registrar or student services section)
- Complete during orientation or through the student portal
- Specify exactly what information can be shared and with whom
- Submit according to the college's procedure
- Keep copies of all signed waivers
Common FERPA Waiver Categories:
- Academic Records: Grades, academic standing, course information
- Financial Records: Billing, payments, financial aid
- Student Conduct: Disciplinary actions and proceedings
- Health Information: May require separate authorization (see HIPAA section)
The FERPA Conversation: A Framework for Families
Before automatically signing (or not signing) FERPA waivers, students and parents should have a thoughtful conversation about information sharing. Here's a framework for that discussion:
For Students to Consider:
- What level of privacy feels appropriate as you transition to adulthood?
- How involved have your parents been in your education historically?
- Do you anticipate needing parental guidance in certain areas?
- Are there specific records you're comfortable sharing vs. keeping private?
- What are the financial dynamics (who is paying for what)?
For Parents to Consider:
- How can you support your student's growing independence?
- What information do you truly need versus want?
- How will you respond if you see information that concerns you?
- Can you establish trust-based communication rather than relying on formal access?
Conversation Starters:
- "Let's talk about how we'll handle academic information now that you're in college."
- "I'd like to understand what access you're comfortable with me having to your college records."
- "Can we discuss how we'll communicate about grades and academic progress?"
- "What's a good balance between your privacy and our financial investment?"
Potential Compromise Positions:
- Grade Check-Ins: Student agrees to share grade reports directly rather than giving portal access
- Conditional Access: FERPA waiver is signed but only invoked if GPA drops below a certain threshold
- Limited Scope: Waiver covers financial information but not academic records
- Time-Limited: Agreement to revisit the decision after the first semester
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