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MichMan

(16,911 posts)
6. "As more elite students get accommodations, the system worsens the problem it was designed to solve."
Tue Feb 10, 2026, 12:06 PM
Tuesday
Collar, the University of Chicago physics professor, said that part of what his exams are designed to assess is the ability to solve problems in a certain amount of time. But now many of his students are in a separate room, with time and a half or even double the allotted time to complete the test. “I feel for the students who are not taking advantage of this,” he told me. “We have a two-speed student population.”

The surge itself is undeniable. Soon, some schools may have more students receiving accommodations than not, a scenario that would have seemed absurd just a decade ago. Already, at one law school, 45 percent of students receive academic accommodations. Paul Graham Fisher, a Stanford professor who served as co-chair of the university’s disability task force, told me, “I have had conversations with people in the Stanford administration. They’ve talked about at what point can we say no? What if it hits 50 or 60 percent? At what point do you just say ‘We can’t do this’?” This year, 38 percent of Stanford undergraduates are registered as having a disability; in the fall quarter, 24 percent of undergraduates were receiving academic or housing accommodations.

As more elite students get accommodations, the system worsens the problem it was designed to solve. The ADA was supposed to make college more equitable. Instead, accommodations have become another way for the most privileged students to press their advantage.

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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 Yesterday #16
So many of our problems are the direct result of the republican party's meddling. Initech Tuesday #13
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