1.
As a result of the controversy over inBloom
and related issues, the NY State legislature passed Education
Law §2-d in 2014, with the goal of protecting the privacy and the security
of student data that schools, districts and states as well as their contractors
collect and disclose. After nearly five years, the NY State Education
Department has finally issued proposed
regulations to be used in enacting and enforcing this law. The deadline for commenting on these
regulations is this Sunday, March 31.
Our Parent Coalition for Student Privacy, along with NYSAPE and
Class Size Matters, has sent detailed comments to NYSED on how these
regulations should be improved, especially as they omit several important
provisions of the law. We have also
prepared an email you can send NYSED in support of our proposed changes by clicking
here . You can of course alter this
email in any way you like, or send your own comments to REGCOMMENTS@nysed.gov , but please
remember the deadline is Sunday.
2. Also, today is SAT day in NYC schools and in many
other districts and states across the country.
The College Board not only asks students many personal questions in
their pre-test surveys before they take the exam without making clear that
answering them is voluntary, but also sells the information they collect to
other organizations and companies at 45
cents per name. An article about
this practice was published
in the NY Times last summer.
Meanwhile, the US Department of Education has also advised
states and districts that allowing the
College Board to ask certain sensitive questions of students in school without
parental consent which it then shares with other organizations may be illegal,
according to three federal laws: FERPA, IDEA and PPRA.
Please ask your children what questions they were asked in the
pre-test surveys, and whether they were
informed that answering these questions was purely optional. If they provided any personal information you
don’t want shared or sold, you can opt out of the Student Search Service on the
College Board website,
and/or demand that College Board delete
the data.
Please also let us know if you find out that certain questions
were asked of your kids that you consider overly sensitive by emailing us at info@studentprivacymatters.org
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