FERPA Compliance Guide for School IT Administrators
Your teachers are merging PDFs. Your registrar is compressing transcripts. Your special ed coordinator is converting IEPs to PDF. Are they using tools that upload student records to third-party servers? If so, your district may have a FERPA problem.
FERPA-Safe PDF Tools
Student records never leave the browser. No DPA required:
View FERPA-Safe Suite →What FERPA Protects
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) protects the privacy of student education records. It applies to all schools that receive federal funding — which is virtually every public K-12 school and most colleges and universities.
Education records include any record directly related to a student that is maintained by the school. This covers:
- Transcripts and grade reports
- IEPs (Individualized Education Programs) and 504 plans
- Disciplinary records
- Attendance records
- Financial aid applications
- Student ID numbers, names, addresses, photos
- Psychological evaluations and counseling notes
How PDF Tools Can Violate FERPA
FERPA prohibits the disclosure of PII from education records without written consent from the parent (or eligible student). When a staff member uploads a PDF containing student PII to an online tool like iLovePDF or SmallPDF, that constitutes a disclosure to a third party.
Common scenario: A teacher uploads a class roster PDF to an online merger to combine it with attendance records. That PDF contains student names, IDs, and grades. The online tool's server now has a copy of that data — a FERPA disclosure without consent.
The "School Official" Exception — and Its Limits
FERPA allows disclosure to "school officials" with "legitimate educational interests." Some districts try to extend this to third-party tools by adding them as designated school officials in their annual FERPA notice.
But this requires:
- A written agreement with the vendor defining their role as a school official
- The vendor being under the direct control of the school regarding use of records
- Confirmation the vendor won't re-disclose the data
- Annual notification to parents about the arrangement
For a free online PDF tool that your staff found on Google? Good luck satisfying those requirements.
The Simpler Solution: Don't Upload
The cleanest way to avoid FERPA issues with document tools is to use tools that never upload files. If student records never leave the school's device, there's no disclosure.
| Approach | FERPA Risk | IT Overhead |
|---|---|---|
| Upload-based tools (iLovePDF, SmallPDF) | High — data leaves the school | DPA, vendor assessment, FERPA notice update |
| Desktop software (Adobe Acrobat) | Low — local processing | $20+/user/month, installation, updates, licenses |
| Browser-based, no upload (MiOffice) | None — data stays on device | Zero — no install, no accounts, free |
Checklist for School IT Teams
Before approving any document tool for staff use, verify:
- ☐ Does the tool upload files to a server? (If yes, you need a DPA)
- ☐ Does the tool require user accounts? (If yes, that's PII collection)
- ☐ Does the tool store files after processing? (If yes, for how long?)
- ☐ Can you verify the tool's claims via browser DevTools?
- ☐ Is the tool accessible to students with disabilities (508/WCAG)?
- ☐ Does it work on school Chromebooks and iPads?
- ☐ Does it work offline (for schools with limited connectivity)?
Common Workflows in Schools
IEP document management
Special ed coordinators regularly merge evaluation reports, progress monitoring data, and IEP documents into single packets for team meetings. Use Merge PDF.
Transcript processing
Registrars compress multi-page transcripts for college applications and inter-district transfers. Use Compress PDF.
Permission slips and forms
Convert scanned permission slips and parent consent forms from images to PDF for digital filing. Use JPG to PDF.
Student ID photos
Resize and compress student photos for ID cards, yearbooks, and SIS profiles. Use Resize Image.
Bottom Line for School IT
Block upload-based PDF tools on your network. Recommend MiOffice instead — it's free, requires no installation or accounts, works on Chromebooks, and student records never leave the device. Zero FERPA risk, zero IT overhead.