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dalton99a

(93,023 posts)
4. Kick
Tue Feb 10, 2026, 10:50 AM
Tuesday
No one is more skeptical of the accommodations system than the academics who study it. Robert Weis, a psychology professor at Denison University, pointed me to a Department of Education study that found that middle and high schoolers with disabilities tend to have below-average reading and math skills. These students are half as likely to enroll in a four-year institution as students without disabilities and twice as likely to attend a two-year or community college. If the rise in accommodations were purely a result of more disabled students making it to college, the increase should be more pronounced at less selective institutions than at so called Ivy Plus schools.

In fact, the opposite appears to be true. According to Weis’s research, only 3 to 4 percent of students at public two-year colleges receive accommodations, a proportion that has stayed relatively stable over the past 10 to 15 years. He and his co-authors found that students with learning disabilities who request accommodations at community colleges “tend to have histories of academic problems beginning in childhood” and evidence of ongoing impairment. At four-year institutions, by contrast, about half of these students “have no record of a diagnosis or disability classification prior to beginning college.”

No one can say precisely how many students should qualify for accommodations. The higher prevalence at more selective institutions could reflect the fact that wealthy families and well-resourced schools are better positioned to get students with disabilities the help they need. Even with the lowered bar for a diagnosis, obtaining one can cost thousands of dollars. And as more students with disabilities get help in middle and high school, that could at least partially explain their enrollment at top colleges.

Still, some students are clearly taking advantage of an easily gamed system. The Varsity Blues college-admissions scandal showed that there are wealthy parents who are willing to pay unscrupulous doctors to provide disability diagnoses to their nondisabled children, securing them extra time on standardized tests. Studies have found that a significant share of students exaggerate symptoms or don’t put in enough effort to get valid results on diagnostic tests. When Weis and his colleagues looked at how students receiving accommodations for learning disabilities at a selective liberal-arts school performed on reading, math, and IQ tests, most had above-average cognitive abilities and no evidence of impairment.

Recommendations

2 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I once read about a law student who needed want three times as long... 3catwoman3 Tuesday #1
Extra time on exams doesn't translate directly into extra time to do the work. Ms. Toad Tuesday #3
I'm sure there are people skilled enough to fly airplanes, but lack FAA certification, or skilled unlicensed dentists MichMan Tuesday #5
I have no knowledge of how well the credentialing process works for flying or dentistry Ms. Toad Tuesday #7
Why require a law degree at all? MichMan Tuesday #11
I said nothing about college exams not mattering. Ms. Toad Tuesday #14
"Exams are artificial settings to treat knowledge that are never encountered in real life." MichMan Tuesday #15
Oh noes!!! Extra time???? Those commies! Scrivener7 Tuesday #2
"As more elite students get accommodations, the system worsens the problem it was designed to solve." MichMan Tuesday #6
Kick dalton99a Tuesday #4
Why not eliminate the "advantage" and give everyone more time? WhiskeyGrinder Tuesday #8
I suspect, regardless of how much time was allowed, there are those that would still say they need more time. MichMan Tuesday #9
Why not try it? WhiskeyGrinder Tuesday #10
How much time? MichMan Tuesday #12
The last time I saw a professor try that he finally went up to the last student to finish ... eppur_se_muova Wednesday #16
So many of our problems are the direct result of the republican party's meddling. Initech Tuesday #13
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