Open Source Hostel Management for Colleges
An LGPLv3-licensed residence management system for community and undergraduate colleges that need source-code transparency for FERPA audits, separate access layers for Title IX incident logs, and ACUHO-I-aligned reporting — without locking adult-student records inside a proprietary vendor stack.
Open source hostel management for colleges is a residence-life platform distributed under an OSI-approved license — giving residence-life directors and IT staff source-code access, FERPA-aware role-based access controls, Title IX incident logging on a separate access layer, and customizable RA and conduct workflows aligned with ACUHO-I standards. Unlike closed dorm-management products, it lets colleges audit how adult-student records are protected, modify conduct policy enforcement to match institutional handbooks, and self-host the housing data layer while preserving integration with billing, financial aid, and student information systems.
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LGPLv3 source-code transparency
OpenEduCat's hostel module ships under LGPLv3. Residence-life IT staff and institutional security reviewers can audit room-assignment logic, incident-record handling, and access-control code line-by-line — satisfying FERPA data-flow audits, internal IT-security review, and the ACUHO-I expectation that housing operations maintain documented control over their software stack and student-record processing.
FERPA-aware role-based access (adult-student protection)
Built-in roles separate front-desk staff, resident assistants, hall directors, residence-life leadership, and conduct officers — each scoped to the minimum education records they need. The system enforces FERPA's adult-student provisions: once a student turns 18 or enters a postsecondary institution, parent and guardian disclosures require documented consent or a recognized exception, and the system logs every record access for the annual FERPA audit trail.
Title IX incident logging with separate access layer
Title IX incident reports live on a sealed access layer — not in the general hostel database. Only designated Title IX coordinators and deputies can read or amend records. Resident assistants can file initial reports but lose read access after submission, preventing peer disclosure risk. The audit log is immutable and date-stamped, supporting documentation requirements under the Title IX Final Rule (2024) for residential-life incident handling.
Customizable RA and conduct workflows
Configure check-in/check-out rounds, quiet-hour patrols, guest sign-in policies, lockout responses, and incident escalation paths to match your institutional handbook — not a vendor's default. Conduct workflows route documented violations through warning, educational sanction, housing probation, and removal steps that mirror your existing student-conduct code, with timestamps and acknowledgements preserved for due-process documentation.
Integration with billing and financial aid for housing costs
Room rates, meal-plan tiers, damage charges, and prorated refunds post directly to the student account, and authorized housing financial aid (institutional, state, or Title IV) draws against those charges through the billing module. Mid-semester room changes, board-plan upgrades, and withdrawal refunds reconcile automatically — so the bursar's office isn't reverse-engineering housing charges from spreadsheet exports.
API for ACUHO-I-aligned reporting
REST and JSON-RPC endpoints expose occupancy, turnover, incident-category counts, programming participation, and roommate-satisfaction metrics so residence-life directors can build reports against the ACUHO-I benchmarking framework. Connect to institutional BI tools (Tableau, Power BI, Metabase) for board reports, or push de-identified aggregates to consortium benchmarking surveys without manual CSV exports.
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What does 'open source' actually mean here — is it just 'free'?
Open source and free-of-charge are different things. OpenEduCat's hostel module is distributed under LGPLv3, an OSI-approved open-source license that grants four rights: to use, study, modify, and redistribute the source. 'Free' dorm-management tools often ship as freeware binaries with no source access, no modification rights, and no audit trail of how adult-student records are handled internally. For a FERPA-regulated environment that distinction matters: open source gives residence-life and IT the ability to verify exactly how Title IX incident data and student-record access are enforced, rather than trusting a vendor's marketing claim.
How does this compare to StarRez and RMS Mercury, the proprietary college-housing standards?
StarRez and RMS Mercury are mature, well-supported proprietary platforms with deeper turnkey features for large campus-housing operations — application portals, deposit workflows, and analytics dashboards developed over decades. They're the right choice for institutions that want a polished, vendor-supported product and have the subscription budget for it. Open source suits colleges that need to customize conduct workflows or Title IX handling to match an institutional handbook, want to audit how adult-student records are protected, or need to host data under specific contractual or sovereignty constraints. Many mid-size colleges run open source for residence operations while keeping proprietary tools only where vendor analytics depth genuinely justifies the lock-in.
How does FERPA apply once students are adults — can parents still see hostel records?
Under FERPA's adult-student provisions, once a student reaches 18 or enrolls in a postsecondary institution (whichever comes first), education-record rights transfer from parent to student. Parents do not have a default right to view hostel records, incident reports, or conduct files. There are recognized exceptions — financial-dependent disclosures, health-and-safety emergencies, and drug/alcohol violations for students under 21 — but each requires documentation. The hostel module enforces this by default: parent-portal access requires explicit student consent or a logged FERPA exception, and every disclosure is captured in the audit log the institution can produce at the next compliance review.
How are Title IX incidents handled differently from other residence reports?
Title IX incidents are partitioned to a sealed access layer separate from the general residence database. Resident assistants can file an initial report but lose read access immediately after submission — they cannot revisit, amend, or share it. Only designated Title IX coordinators and deputies, plus authorized investigators, have ongoing read/write access. The audit log is immutable, timestamps every action, and supports the documentation requirements introduced by the Title IX Final Rule (2024) for handling residential-life incidents, including supportive-measure tracking and the records the institution must retain for the regulatory seven-year window.
Does the system align with ACUHO-I standards and benchmarking?
Yes. The Association of College and University Housing Officers International (ACUHO-I) publishes standards covering staffing, programming, facilities, conduct, and assessment for college residence operations. OpenEduCat's hostel module is structured around those domains — RA workload tracking, programming participation logs, occupancy and turnover metrics, and incident-category counts — and exposes them via API so directors can build reports against the ACUHO-I benchmarking framework. Open-source customization lets you adapt fields to match the specific assessment cycles your institution participates in, rather than waiting for a vendor product release.
How do we customize conduct workflows without losing the ability to upgrade?
OpenEduCat uses Odoo's module inheritance pattern, so local customizations live in a separate institutional module that extends — rather than overwrites — core code. Your specific conduct escalation steps, Title IX coordinator routing, RA duty rotation rules, and parent-disclosure exception flags stay in your institutional overlay. When the upstream hostel module releases an update, your customizations continue to apply. This is the separation-of-concerns model that lets a residence-life office encode its handbook into the software without the upgrade-vs-customize trade-off that proprietary platforms typically force.
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