Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)

As an Independent Educational Consultant with 20 years of experience, if I could tell every parent of a college student to do one thing — just one — this is it. Set up the voluntary FERPA release with your student's college or university before move-in day.
Here's why it matters so very much: On the day your child enrolled, federal law transferred all rights to their educational records from you to them. Therefore, the college or university cannot speak to the parents about anything. This includes grades, enrollment status, financial aid, a mental health crisis, or a billing snafu that prevents them from registering for classes.
It takes less than 5 minutes to complete the FERPA release. Go to their student portal → privacy settings or authorized users → add your name. It’s that simple.
Inform your student that you have signed the FERPA release and explain its critical importance. This is less about monitoring grades (although if you’re funding their education in full or in part, you are entitled to this information) and more about responsible parenting, even for a college-aged child. Signing the FERPA guarantees that you can help if something goes wrong that your child cannot handle alone. A mental health situation. A financial emergency. Anything where your child needs you to communicate with the college or university. That's what the FERPA makes possible. Without it, there is no communication between the parent and the college or university.
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