CPI Student Records Confidentiality
A new provision was added
this year to the law that governs CPI students. NEW Iowa Code section 299A.11
states:
Notwithstanding any provision of law or rule to the contrary, personal
information in records regarding a child receiving competent private
instruction pursuant to this chapter, which are maintained, created,
collected, or assembled by or for a state agency, shall be kept
confidential in the same manner as personal information in student
records maintained, created, collected, or assembled by or for a school
corporation or educational institution in accordance with section 22.7,
subsection 1. [Section 22.7(1) requires that personal information
regarding students be kept confidential as an exception to the Open
Records Law.] New section 299A.11 gives CPI students and their families
the same state privacy protection as regularly enrolled students and
their families.
Some CPI families are providing their resident school districts
a courtesy notice to remind the districts that personal information about their
children must be kept confidential even if the district receives no "opt out"
form. The courtesy notice is quite correct. Under the new state law, all
personal information of CPI students who are not dually enrolled and/or
enrolled in a Home School Assistance Program (HSAP) is to be protected.
State law covers all CPI students because a Form A (Report of
CPI) must be filed on behalf of all such students of compulsory attendance age.
Form A must be maintained by the resident district, which makes every Form A a
public document. (The records a district may have regarding a child who
receives CPI might also include more specific records for those who are dually
enrolled and/or enrolled in a Home School Assistance Program if a HSAP is
provided by the district.) Under state law (Office of Attorney General Opinion
No. 80-6-8), personal information about a student excludes only the student's
name and address. Therefore, if a request is made for copies of the Form As in
the care of a district, the request must be granted with the personal
information (everything except student's name and address) having been first
expunged either with white-out or by blackening the personal information. If
such a request is made, districts are also urged to first notify the affected
student's family and to delay for a few weeks complying with the request; this
will give a family a chance to try to challenge the request in court. Any such court
challenge will not be against the DISTRICT but will be against the party
requesting the information. Nothing in the law requires a district to comply
immediately with a request for student information, especially if the request
comes from a party with whom the district is not familiar.
On the
other hand, the provisions of FERPA (the federal Family Educational Rights and
Privacy Act) cover only those CPI students who are dually enrolled with the
district or who are enrolled in the district's HSAP (if the district operates
an assistance program). Under FERPA, non-confidential information ("directory
information") must be designated by each district and may include a student's
name, address, telephone listing, email address, date of birth, grade level,
and participation in activities and sports, to name the most pertinent ones.
And the annual FERPA notice and the separate notice about military recruiters
must be sent to the parents/guardians of all regularly enrolled students and
those CPI students who are dually enrolled and/or enrolled in a HSAP.
If a district receives an "opt out" form on behalf of a CPI
student who is dually enrolled or enrolled in a HSAP, the district is
accustomed to protecting that student's personal information. The courtesy notice
that a district might get is a valid reminder that personal information about a
CPI child must be kept confidential even if the district receives no "opt out"
form.
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