Universities and K-12 schools are increasingly relying on companies to accomplish tasks, like IT and administrative functions. Companies that schools are outsourcing products and services to are considered their third-party vendors.
Even after tasks have been handed to a third-party vendor, schools must follow strict privacy regulations to protect sensitive student data. The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) mandates that educational records cannot be shared without prior written authorization from the student or their guardian.
So, third parties don't have access to student data without first verifying with the student or their guardian that their data is safe, right? Well, not quite.
There’s one notable exemption to this that schools can use to grant their third-party vendors’ access. Per FERPA, the third-party vendor must meet all the following conditions to meet the school official exemption:
Note: The italics indicate that it’s directly from the guidance.
This is why to comply with FERPA, educational organizations and institutions must ensure that their third-party vendor contracts follow the requirements that govern how student information is used.
Education technology (edtech) vendors are often regarded as those with the most access to protected data, but FERPA-compliant contracts shouldn't be limited just to edtech vendors. Any third-party vendor that has access to student information should have a contract in place that ensures compliance.
Tip: Before executing the contract with your third-party vendor, your third-party risk management program should evaluate the risks of the vendor. The third-party risk management team should conduct comprehensive due diligence that verifies the vendor has appropriate cybersecurity and privacy controls to protect institutional and student data.
Your third-party risk management team should work closely with the legal department and the school board or board of trustees to ensure that all vendor contracts comply with FERPA’s regulations on student data. A well-structured contract is one the best risk management tools an educational institution can have to protect its students. The vendor contract outlines and formalizes the expectations for the relationship. After all, if a requirement is not in the contract, it won't likely be met.
Incorporating these 13 essential components listed below into vendor contracts ensures that educational institutions achieve FERPA compliance with their vendors. It will also safeguard student privacy and build a robust data security framework.
Of course, compliance doesn’t just end with the signed contract. Once you’ve set your expectations and standards with your vendor in the contract, you’ll need to ensure that they follow through with it.
To do this, your third-party risk management team should store vendor contracts in a central location for ease of access and monitoring to prevent important dates from lapsing, like the contract non-renewal notice period. Automated alert notifications prior to a contract auto-renewing or expiring are helpful.
Additionally, your third-party risk management team should conduct regular ongoing monitoring to review the vendor’s product and service delivery on a continuous basis. Ongoing monitoring of the vendor risk and contract ensures:
If there are any changes or issues with the vendor’s compliance, risk, or performance level, those should be documented so they can be resolved or escalated to senior management. That will then help you make decisions about contract renewals or potential termination.
Having a robust third-party risk management program that follows the third-party risk management lifecycle (onboarding, ongoing, and offboarding) is the best way to ensure that vendor requirements are met in all your contracts. The lifecycle was initially developed by financial regulators, but is now a best practice for all industries.
It serves as a roadmap for managing your vendor relationships. The lifecycle illustrates each step and activity necessary for identifying, assessing, mitigating, and monitoring vendor risk throughout the relationship.
From the initial due diligence and contract negotiations for onboarding a vendor, monitoring a vendor’s compliance, cybersecurity, and privacy controls during the ongoing relationship, to offboarding a vendor in a safe and secure way, the third-party risk management lifecycle guides the team through each step.
FERPA prohibits sharing private data without the prior written consent of students or their guardians and educational institutions must comply with the regulation when using third-party vendors. Implementing robust third-party risk management practices and a carefully written contract can go a long way toward ensuring FERPA compliance and protecting student data.