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A2348 • 2026

Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.

Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.

Education
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Moen, William F., Jr.
Last action
2026-01-13
Official status
Introduced, Referred to Assembly Education Committee
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.

Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.

What This Bill Does

  • Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.
  • Topic: Education Fiscal note: This bill has not been certified by OLS for a fiscal note.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-01-13 New Jersey Legislature

    Introduced, Referred to Assembly Education Committee

Official Summary Text

Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.
Topic:
Education
Fiscal note:
This bill has not been certified by OLS for a fiscal note.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
A2348

ASSEMBLY, No. 2348

STATE OF NEW JERSEY

222nd LEGISLATURE

�

PRE-FILED FOR INTRODUCTION IN THE 2026 SESSION

Sponsored by:

Assemblyman WILLIAM F. MOEN, JR.

District 5 (Camden and Gloucester)

Co-Sponsored by:

Assemblywoman Reynolds-Jackson

SYNOPSIS

���� Permits use of preferred names on student diplomas.

CURRENT VERSION OF TEXT

���� Introduced Pending Technical Review by Legislative
Counsel.

��

An Act
concerning the use of preferred names on student diplomas
and supplementing chapter 6 of Title 18A of the New Jersey Statutes.

����
Be It
Enacted
by the Senate and General Assembly of
the State of New Jersey:

���� 1.��� All public and nonpublic
schools, institutions of higher education, and proprietary institutions
licensed to offer academic degrees shall provide a graduating student with an
option to request that a diploma be conferred by the school or institution listing
the student�s preferred name.� A school or institution shall not require a
graduating student to provide legal documentation sufficient to demonstrate a
legal name or gender change to permit the student to use a preferred name.�

���� A school or institution shall
have the right to deny a preferred name request if the preferred name is
intended to:

���� a.���� misrepresent the
person�s identity or misappropriate the identity of another person;

���� b.��� avoid a legal
obligation;

���� c.���� harm the reputation or
interests of the school or institution; or

���� d.��� be derogatory, obscene,
or otherwise inappropriate.

���� 2.��� a.� A public or
nonpublic school, institution of higher education, or proprietary institution
licensed to offer degrees shall update a former student�s records provided that
the former student provides sufficient documentation that the former student�s
legal name or gender has been changed.� Documents sufficient to demonstrate a
legal name or gender change include, but need not be limit to, the following:

���� (1)�� state-issued driver�s
license;

���� (2)�� birth certificate;

���� (3)�� passport;

���� (4)�� social security card; or

���� (5)�� court order indicating a
name change, gender change, or both.

���� b.��� Upon receipt of proper
documentation sufficient to demonstrate a legal name or gender change, a school
or institution shall reissue any documents conferred upon the former student
with the former student�s updated legal name or gender.� Documents that shall
be reissued by the school or institution upon request include, but need not be
limited to, a transcript or diploma conferred by the school or institution.� A
school or institution may charge a nominal

fee for the reissuance of any
document requested by a former student pursuant to this section.

���� 3.��� This act shall take
effect on the first full day of the third month next following the date of
enactment.

STATEMENT

���� This bill permits graduating
students to use preferred names on diplomas conferred by public and nonpublic
schools, institutions of higher education, and proprietary institutions
licensed to offer academic degrees.� Graduating students would not be required
to provide legal documentation sufficient to demonstrate a legal name or gender
change in order to use a preferred name. Schools and institutions have the
right to deny a preferred name request if the preferred name is intended to
misrepresent the person�s identity or misappropriate the identity of another
person, avoid a legal obligation, harm the reputation or interests of the
school or institution, or be derogatory, obscene, or otherwise inappropriate.

���� Schools and institutions would
also be required to update a former student�s records provided that the former
student provides sufficient documentation demonstrating a legal name or gender
change.� Acceptable documents include a state-issued driver�s license, birth
certificate, passport, social security card, or court order indicating a legal
name or gender change, or both.� Upon receipt of proper documentation
sufficient to demonstrate a legal name or gender change, a school or
institution is required to reissue any documents conferred upon the former
student with the former student�s updated legal name or gender upon request.�
Documents that could be reissued include, but are not limited to, a transcript
or diploma conferred by the school or institution.� Schools and institutions
would be permitted to charge a nominal fee for the reissuance of any document
requested by a former student pursuant to this bill.