Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Accommodations AngstBy ABIGAIL SULLIVAN MOORE

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/07/education/edlife/07strategy-t.html?r=1 & em

Accommodations AngstBy ABIGAIL SULLIVAN MOORE

EXTRA time. More breaks. A small, quiet room. Seeking such accommodations on

entrance exams can be a journey of angst for students with learning disabilities

and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. A new set of federal regulations,

published in September and effective in March, could smooth the path.

Still, legal experts are skeptical, and guidance counselors, tutors and

disabilities advocates say the process has become even harder for the ACT and

SAT over the last five years or so.

“They have toughened up,” says Cafaro, a former high school guidance

counselor who serves on the executive board of the New Jersey Association for

College Admissions Counselors. “It’s clear they are a lot more choosy where

those accommodations can be used.”

And the ACT is considered the tougher of the two. “I will do the same

documentation for Jane Doe for the SAT and ACT,” says Anne B. Carlson, guidance

department chairwoman at Walton High School in Marietta, Ga. “The SAT will come

back approved, and the ACT will come back not approved.”

THE BOTTOM LINE

Students with learning disabilities or A.D.H.D. now make up the bulk of disabled

students seeking special accommodations, though they are a small percentage of

all takers of the ACT (nearly 4 percent) and SAT (about 2 percent).

In reality, the percentage of approvals is relatively high. For the last school

year, ACT Inc. initially denied about 25 percent of applications for

accommodations. The College Board asked about 20 percent for additional

documentation for the SAT. Many persevere, going back and forth until the

testing companies are satisfied. Ultimately, the ACT approves about 92 percent

of applicants, and the SAT about 85 percent (less than 10 percent of those are

for physical disabilities).

Neither the College Board nor ACT believes documentation requirements for

special accommodation have toughened.

Pereira, executive director of Services for Students With Disabilities

for the College Board, says that such a perception might come from efforts to be

more precise about documentation, and that the process has been redefined

annually. “I could see that as appearing more stringent,” he says.

ACT officials say they have not changed their standards. Noting their high

approval rates, they suggest applicants are self-selecting. “I may be going out

a limb here,” says Sherri , an assistant vice president, “but if people

didn’t really have a disability they wouldn’t apply because they would see they

are not going to pass our requirements.”

BACKSTORY

Testing organizations have long feared that unmerited accommodations, especially

extra time, undermines their exams’ integrity.

A 2000 audit of California test takers showed a disproportionate number of

white, affluent students receiving accommodations, igniting suspicions of

exaggerated or nonexistent disabilities. Three years later, in the wake of a

lawsuit, ACT and the College Board stopped flagging scores of accommodated

students for admissions offices; with the stigma gone, the incentive grew to

game the system. “What was before a pro forma request now turned into a very

elaborate process with a lot of waiting time,” says Roy Goodman,

co-author of “College Admissions Together: It Takes a Family.”

Meanwhile, courts decided that a disability must be severely limiting to be

covered by the Americans With Disabilities Act. Taking their cue from this

definition, testers have especially scrutinized students with average to

above-average academic performance — after all, how can a student do so well and

be significantly restricted? “Because the A.D.A. is outcome neutral, we are not

looking to maximize a student’s performance so that they can do the best they

can,” says son, ACT’s manager of test accommodations. “We are

looking to provide equal access.”

Congress, however, over objections from ACT, in 2008 rejected the courts’

“narrow” understanding of disability and amended the A.D.A. New rules are being

drafted to expand the definition of disability. The regulations that were just

published tell testers to give “considerable weight” to documented

accommodations at applicants’ schools, keep documentation requests “reasonable”

and give credence to assessments of disabilities by qualified evaluators.

In theory, says Jo Anne Simon, a New York disability rights lawyer, the new

rules will mean “schools and parents will not have to jump through hoops.” But

she and other lawyers worry about compliance by testing agencies.

“In my general experience, the SAT is using more appropriate standards for

proving that you have a disability,” says Matt Cohen, a special-education lawyer

in Chicago. The ACT and graduate school entry exams, he believes, “are raising

the threshold for the documentation and extent of impairment.”

ACT says it adheres to the A.D.A. “When the regulations become effective,” says

Mrs. son, “the ACT will adjust its policies.”

HOW TO

Patsy J. Prince of Academic Tutoring Centers in suburban Chicago says this of

the ACT and SAT: “Both have become more difficult, and rightly so. People sense

that they could use extended time and don’t realize that you have to have a

diagnosed issue. They are inundated with requests for extended time without

testing from an educational psychologist.”

Whatever the exam, applicants need to demonstrate that their disability

substantially limits their daily functioning and their ability to take the test.

They must show that their requested accommodation fits their disability — extra

time (typically 100 to 125 more minutes) for a student with a reading

disability, or breaks between tests for a student with poor attention. Extended

time is the most requested accommodation.

Students also must prove they have used similar accommodations in their school,

even if informally. “The presumption is that if you’re not using it, you don’t

need it,” says Nora Belanger, a disability rights and special-education lawyer

in Norwalk, Conn.

Public school students may have formal plans: an Individualized Educational Plan

for specialized instruction, services, accommodations and academic goals, or a

less intensive Section 504 Plan. Private schools, on the other hand, may provide

accommodations informally, like giving time at lunch to finish a test. All this

documentation is vital. But know what’s in there: plans can lack a diagnosis,

recommended accommodations or a usable evaluation.

Parents often find themselves at cross-purposes with secondary school educators,

who are unable or reluctant to provide more testing. So legal experts say the

best investment is a comprehensive private evaluation, which can cost $1,000 to

$5,000. “If you have to choose between a lawyer and someone who can tell what’s

wrong with your kid, choose the evaluator,” says Micki Moran, a Chicago lawyer

with expertise in special-education issues.

BEST ADVICE

Documentation submitted to the College Board and ACT ranges from one page to

hundreds. Sometimes key information is buried. Such was the case for one student

whose school submitted his 40-page-plus I.E.P. without summarizing why he needed

accommodations for the SAT. He was denied. Varrassi, his tutor, stepped

in: “I wasn’t the evaluator but I took the info that was already there and was

able to present it in a four-page letter that flowed logically.” The application

was approved.

Perseverance pays. “Sometimes after two, three, four submissions the document

with the meat finally turns up,” Mr. Pereira says. Or, on occasion, he adds, a

fresh set of eyes will make another determination.

Because testing organizations may ask applicants for more documentation,

“parents need to be organized,” says beth Kravets, co-author of the “K & W

Guide to Colleges for Students With Learning Disabilities or Attention Deficit

Hyperactivity Disorder.”

“They need to copy everything in school files as early as possible,” she says.

“They need to have a copy of special-education records, if they have medical

records when the child was 7 or 9 and a kid was acting out.”

Perhaps the biggest red flag is a late diagnosis.

If a student’s condition is diagnosed in high school or just before, that tends

to raise questions. If it is less than three school years before their request

for ACT accommodations, students are required to submit “full” documentation —

for example, for A.D.H.D. that includes results from a professional evaluation,

an overview, evidence of early and current impairment, relevant testing, and the

impact of current accommodations.

In cases suggesting later diagnoses, the College Board also requires full

documentation, but typically when a student has used accommodations or had a

formal plan in place for only less than four months.

“It’s a big difference,” says Peggy Hock, a psychologist and learning specialist

at Kehillah Jewish High School in Palo Alto, Calif., adding that many students’

conditions aren’t diagnosed until they begin the demands of high school. Mrs.

son, too, says that bright students, or students who move from school to

school, may evade early detection. Still, she says, the ACT follows the

established criteria that A.D.H.D. symptoms surface before age 7.

So when a diagnosis comes later, she advises families to be creative. “More is

always better,” Mrs. son says. “Some people have done some very creative

things. Report cards, letters from baby sitters and child care centers to show

difficulty at recess when children are little. We will piece together that

documentation.”

Of course, the best route is for parents to push their school to test their

child as soon as they sense something is amiss.

“Unfortunately,” says H. Wendorf, executive director of the National

Center for Learning Disabilities, “many parents adopt a wait-and-see attitude

that can lead to a situation where it’s wait to fail.”

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...