Who Should Have Access to Student Records?

Education data can be useful, but privacy experts are concerned about data 
misuse.

By Jason Koebler

January 19, 2012 RSS Feed Print

http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2012/01/19/who-should-have-access-to-student-records

Since “No Child Left Behind” was passed 10 years ago, states have been required 
to ramp up the amount of data they collect about individual students, teachers, 
and schools. Personal information,  including test scores, economic status, 
grades, and even disciplinary problems and student pregnancies, are tracked and 
stored in a kind of virtual “permanent record” for each student.

But parents and students have very little access to that data, according to a 
report released Wednesday by the Data Quality Campaign, an organization that 
advocates for expanded data use.

All 50 states and Washington, D.C. collect long term, individualized data on 
students performance, but just eight states allow parents to access their 
child’s permanent record. Forty allow principals to access the data and 28 
provide student-level info to teachers.

Education experts, including Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and former 
Washington, D.C., Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee, argue that education 
officials can use student data to assess teachers—if many students’ test scores 
are jumping in a specific teacher’s class, odds are that teacher is doing a 
good job.

Likewise, teachers can use the data to see where a student may have struggled 
in the past and can tailor instruction to suit his needs.

At an event discussing the Data Quality Campaign report Wednesday, Rhee said 
students also used the information to try to out-achieve each other.

“The data can be an absolute game changer,” she says. “If you have the data, 
and you can invest and engage children and their families in this data, it can 
change a culture quickly.”

Privacy experts say the problem is that states collect far more information 
than parents expect, and it can be shared with more than just a student’s 
teacher or principal.“When you have a system that’s secret [from parents] and 
you can put whatever you want into it, you can have things going in that’ll be 
very damaging,” says Lillie Coney, associate director of the Electronic Privacy 
Information Center. “When you put something into digital form, you can’t 
control where that’ll end up.”

According to a 2009 report by the Fordham University Center on Law and 
Information Policy, some  states store student’s social security numbers, 
family financial information, and student pregnancy data. Nearly half of states 
track students’ mental health issues, illnesses, and jail sentences.Without 
access to their child’s data, parents have no way of knowing what teachers and 
others are learning about them.

The federal government is taking steps to make the data more secure, however. 
In December, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act was revised to give 
parents more control over their children’s records. According to a parent 
information sheet released by the government, the revisions give parents 
“certain rights with regard to their children’s education records, such as the 
right to inspect and review [their] child’s education records.” But it also 
allows student information to be shared without parental consent.

“Your child’s information may be disclosed to another school in which your 
child is enrolling, or to local emergency responders in connection with a 
health or safety emergency,” it says.

Regardless of privacy concerns, education data is not going away. “The best 
thing we can do is continue to fund states that are taking this on in a 
holistic way,” Ed Secretary Duncan says.


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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