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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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Leverage the expertise of our over 11,000 members and contribute to one of the premier sources of practice related research within the global higher education community. 

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AACRAO's bi-weekly professional development e-newsletter

Ask the FERPA Professor

Apr 17, 2017, 19:09 PM
legacy id : 58f504d64c1564140c9e69e7
Summary : What if a parent impersonates a student?
Url :

Dear FERPA Professor,

Would you please assist with this question/situation?  I have a parent/mother who impersonated a student (her daughter) on the telephone.  The parent called in had all the correct information to identify herself over the phone to our front desk staff. The caller was presumably checking the status of transfer credit.  The call evolved into a problem and was transferred to a manager.  The manager assumed they were talking to the student and gave a generic status and promised to call her back with an update. 

The next day the student was called at the same number.  The person who answered our call identified herself as the student and she was given another update to her dissatisfaction which again escalated to a higher level intervention. 

Since the two calls took place, we have found out that the student’s parent impersonated the student and tried to force information from our staff. 

What is your recommendation in terms of addressing this issue with the student?  Should this be documented for the student’s file?  What implications are there with FERPA?  We do not have a student release of information on file for the student.

Thank you in advance for your assistance.

Karen Serned

__________________________________________________________________

Dear Karen,

FERPA requires that institutions use reasonable methods to authenticate prior to disclosing information to the requester. See §99.31(c) of the FERPA regulations which you can find on page 162 of the 2012 AACRAO FERPA Guide.  Items such as SSN, DOB, mother’s maiden name, or the student ID number are not considered reasonable to authenticate under the regulations because this information is too easily obtained or known by others.  Secret pins, passwords, security questions, or other information known or possessed by the student, for example, would be considered reasonable. 

If the information given to the caller was not from the student's education records then no inappropriate disclosure took place.  If it was from the education record, then such a disclosure occurred and your institution is required to record the disclosure in the student's file, noting the records disclosed.  See §99.32(a) of the FERPA regulations on page 163 of the Guide.

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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