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Retired and Former AACRAO Members

Connect to the world of higher education

With AACRAO membership you'll be connected to more than 11,000 members from institutions around the world. Facilitate your professional development by attending discounted meetings, gaining complimentary subscriptions to our College & University journal and more.

Why should you join? Development never ends, retired or not. Keep current on trends in the field by collaborating with our members and lending your voice to discussions about practices in the field. 

Annual Membership Price: $151

Requirements: YOU BE A RETIRED MEMBER OR A MEMBER WHO LOST EMPLOYMENT AND IS NO LONGER ELIGIBLE FOR INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERSHIP.  

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AACRAO's bi-weekly professional development e-newsletter

Ask the FERPA Professor

Feb 6, 2017, 21:05 PM
legacy id : 5898e5314c15640d70de1115
Summary : What if a professor uses a non-university email account?
Url :

Dear FERPA Professor, 

Over the past few years, a university professor has been telling students and colleagues to email her at her personal email address, which is hosted through Gmail. Unfortunately, that email address is one letter off of mine, and as a consequence I am unintentionally sent correspondence on a fairly routine basis. These emails have contained sensitive documents such as grades, transcripts, graduate applications, and interdepartmental correspondence. The professor does have a University supplied email address, but tells students to use Gmail since "she responds much quicker" than with her university account. 

Does this use of a non-university email account violate FERPA? What other recourse do I have other than to inform students of the wrong email address? If I am not the student, can I report a FERPA violation? Unfortunately, I feel like this won't be resolved unless she uses her university account, and I feel uncomfortable being sent private and confidential information. 

 

Regards,

Jane Doh

___________________________________________________

Jane,

Let me begin by agreeing with you that the practice by the professor is not a good one.  This not only puts the professor's email at risk but also means that these emails residing with the professor are education records of the various students that are being maintained on the professor's private email server rather than the institution’s.  The institution is, however, responsible for those records, even though they don’t reside on an institutionally-controlled server, and the institution would be at risk for any unauthorized disclosure or use of those education records.  

Concerning the emails you receive, if they are from the professor, then any information from a student's education record would be an unauthorized disclosure under FERPA.  If the students are sending the information to you rather than the proper school official, then this would not be a disclosure under FERPA.

I hope this is helpful in responding to your inquiry.

 

The FERPA Professor

Please check out our Ask the FERPA Professor archives for more insight from the professor.

Want the Professor to come to your campus? Visit our FERPA compliance training page.

Send your questions for the FERPA Professor to connect@aacrao.org.

 
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  • AACRAO Connect
  • FERPA
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