Making Accommodations
The Legal World of Students with Disabilities
By Paul D. Grossman
The law requires colleges and universities
to make special arrangements for students with disabilities, but not
by lowering academic standards.
My brother sat in the wheelchair he had used for the
past five years, ever since cancer had reached his spine in 1991. As
a teacher and a disability lawyer, I was curious to find out whether
he regretted entering and persevering through law school well after
he understood that his cancer would never remit. His response to my
query was remarkably clear. Attending law school had been one of the
wisest choices in his life. As his body gradually lost the physical
indicia of life—eating, sex, and mobility—he remained a human being,
affirmed by his ability to think, learn, and persuade. Only his deep
faith matched the opportunity to learn in sustaining his spirit through
an otherwise terrible journey to the end of his life.
My brother entered Rutgers School of Law in 1992 and
died shortly after his 1996 admission to the New Jersey Bar. Had he
wasted a seat at a fine, competitive law school, or had he exemplified
for students and faculty alike the most inherent and fundamental value
of engaging in higher learning? Had his exclusive reliance on the Internet
and computers to conduct legal research, without being able physically
to bring a book down from a shelf, demonstrated
the irrelevance of paper media or merely lowered academic standards?
In the competitive environment of law school, was it unfair that he
got extra time to complete his examinations? Had his class discussed
whether the law was an effective tool for addressing the biggest barrier
he faced to completing his internship: snow?
Before adoption of America’s antidiscrimination statutes
related to disability, most institutions of higher education were conforming
participants in a society that, by indiffer-ence, prejudice, or structure,
excluded individuals with disabilities from nearly every aspect of human
endeavor. The questions raised by my brother’s circumstances were not
even available for observation or discussion in the classroom.
Equal Access
Several federal laws protect students with disabilities
from discrimination by institutions of postsecondary education; the
primary ones are Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Section
504), which applies to all colleges that receive federal financial assistance,
and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990, which applies
to three primary groups: employers; government entities, such as state
universities; and private entities that serve the public. Those who
see the connection between disability law and federal civil rights laws
will find the path to understanding disability law a great deal easier
to follow. We desegregate our schools to remove the stigma that comes
from enforced separation and to bring to all students the advantages
of diversity in the classroom.
"Academic adjustments and reasonable modifications"
and the provision of "auxiliary aides and services" are important
tools for desegregating institutions and extending equal educational
opportunity to the disability community. These devices, commonly called
"reasonable accommodations," have had a considerable impact
on who participates in higher education. Academic adjustments include
classroom and testing modifications, such as extra time on examinations.
Auxiliary aids and services include practices that create access to
information for persons with sensory impairments, such as providing
signers for students who are deaf and readers for students who are blind.
Students may not be charged for accommodations to which they are entitled
by law.
Section 504 and the ADA require that students with disabilities
have equal access to information and to the avenues of communication,
including Web sites operated by colleges, other Internet resources,
distance education programs, and the like. When the educational institution
involved is a government entity, the ADA requires that the students
with disabilities are to be provided communication "as effective
as" that provided to nondisabled students. "Communication"
has been defined as the "transfer of information."
In construing the conditions under which communication
is as effective as that provided to nondisabled persons, the U.S. Department
of Education’s Office of Civil Rights has held that the three basic
components of effectiveness are timeliness of delivery, accuracy of
the translation, and provision in a manner and medium appropriate to
the significance of the message and the abilities of the individual
with the disability.
Under certain circumstances, the failure to provide
a reasonable accommodation to a student with a disability is a violation
of law, putting in jeopardy, among other things, an institution’s receipt
of federal financial assistance. On the other hand, misunderstanding
what the duty to provide reasonable accommodations means is a source
of suspicion and fear. Some, for example, worry that providing accommodations
will force colleges and universities to lower academic standards and
foist onto society a generation of unqualified professionals, or simply
compel faculty to violate their own concepts of fair treatment of all
students.
Properly understood and implemented, however, disability
laws will lead to none of these feared outcomes. In fact, students with
disabilities are required to meet the "essential" "academic"
and "technical" standards of the college or university, with
or without reasonable accommodation.
The term "essential" serves to ensure that
colleges and universities need never "fundamentally alter"
their programs of instruction to accommodate students with disabilities.
Federal courts have readily upheld insistence that such students meet
"academic" standards (for example, a requirement for all students
to maintain a certain GPA) and "technical" standards (for
example, a requirement that all dental students demonstrate fine motor
dexterity). Moreover, persons whose disabilities manifest a "direct
threat" to the health and safety of themselves or others may be
excluded from an educational program. On the other hand, a student with
a disability may be permitted a year longer to earn a degree than is
accorded to students under the published rules of the college. By instructing
colleges to distinguish carefully between what is essential and what
is tangential, the courts have used Section 504 and the ADA to create
equal educational opportunity for the disability community without lowering
academic standards.
Degree of Deference
A college may deny a student’s accommodation request
for several reasons. First, an institution can decline requests that
represent a fundamental alteration in the nature of an academic program,
such as excusing a premed student from laboratory classes. Second, a
college may offer less costly but effective alternatives to the accommodations
proposed by students. Third, an institution need not incur an undue
economic or administrative burden in accommodating students with disabilities.
Fourth, it need not bear the expense of personal services. But, when
needed, postsecondary colleges must allow individuals to use "personal
attendants" for activities such as feeding, dressing, or bathing.
The courts and the Office of Civil Rights accord colleges considerable
deference in determining which accommodations will or will not entail
a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program. Several factors
affect the degree of deference accorded a college in any given instance.
Courts are unlikely to accord any deference to a college’s decisions
when there is prevailing evidence of overt bias or retaliation. Similarly,
little deference is accorded individuals in academia who reach conclusions
they are not qualified to reach, such as a mathematics teacher deciding
that an individual is not really disabled.
On the other hand, considerable deference is accorded
to institutions that promulgate well-developed procedures for considering
and implementing requests for accommodations. Such a procedure should
define responsibilities, draw on appropriate expertise, and make careful
and deliberate distinctions as to when accommodations constitute a fundamental
program alteration and when they do not. The Office of Civil Rights
encourages ongoing communication between student and college at every
step of the accommodation process. This "interactive process"
is consistent with the duties the courts and the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission have widely required of employers.
Colleges that automatically, without analysis, implement
every documented request for an accommodation may contribute to prejudices,
lower academic standards, and fuel backlash by students and faculty
that cannot be easily dispelled. The decision to deny an accommodation
should not, however, be taken lightly. Highly respected institutions
have found themselves in serious legal straits for devoting insufficient
thought to the conclusion that a requested accommodation should be denied.
On several occasions, the courts and the Office of Civil
Rights have offered guidance on what the accommodation process should
entail. In a lawsuit under Section 504, a medical student sought, as
an accommodation, substitution of essay for multiple-choice examinations.
Defending itself in court for having denied the student’s request, the
college was required to demonstrate to the court that "the relevant
officials of the institution considered alternative means [of examining
the student], their feasibility, cost and effect on the academic program
and came to a rationally justifiable conclusion that available alternatives
would result either in lowering academic standards or requir[ing] substantial
program alteration." In effect, the court concluded that colleges
were entitled to deference in academic decisions, but only after such
deference was earned by engaging in an affirmative and thorough consideration
process. The court’s reference to "relevant officials" is
also important. The court used this term to highlight its expectation
that both faculty and academic administrators would be involved in this
process.
I am unaware of any case in which a postsecondary institution
lost in court for failing to implement a particular requested accommodation
after it had engaged in the interactive process, provided the plaintiff
several other accommodations, and denied the contested accommodation(s)
on the basis of thoughtful deliberations by qualified individuals.
Legally, the accommodation process begins when a student
identifies himself or herself as an individual with a disability and
asks for assistance. As long as the college or university gives reasonable
notice of how to request help, the courts and the Office of Civil Rights
have been fairly consistent in placing the responsibility on the student
to initiate the accommodation process. Only under very limited circumstances
is there retroactive consideration of how a student was treated prior
to requesting accommodation. Thus, students are generally "stuck"
with the grades they received before asking for an accommodation.
An effective accommodation process begins at a central
point, usually the disabled student services office or provider. The
college or university should clearly identify in student handbooks and
similar publications the location and title of the person whom students
should contact. All faculty, adjunct teachers, counselors, and administrators
should be able to recognize a request for accommodation and know where
to refer students for consideration of their concerns. It is not unlawful
for faculty members to informally accommodate students without involving
a disabled student services office. But such professors run a risk of
learning the true meaning of the phrase "no good deed goes unpunished."
Faculty members are well advised at least to inform their disabled student
services providers of whatever arrangements have been established.
Students need not use "magic words," like
reference to the ADA, to commence the accommodation process. Revelation
of a disability and concern about its relationship to academic performance
is the most common way in which students raise issue that need to be
referred to a disabled student services office. Faculty members are
not required to discover or point out to a student that academic deficiencies
may reflect the impact of a disability. Students should be treated as
adults with concomitant privacy rights. They should never be coerced
into engaging in the accommodation process. No laws are violated, however,
when a faculty member suggests to a student that he or she consider
engaging in the disability assessment and accommodation process.
Documentation
The next step in the accommodation process ordinarily
is for the student to document that he or she has a disability and needs
an accommodation. This leads to the single most complex and litigated
question in disability law: who is an individual with a disability?
Since this subject is best left to the disabled student services providers
and diagnosticians, I will not cover it extensively here.
Although this article focuses on students whose disabilities
make them eligible for accommodations, it is important to know that
Section 504 and the ADA are antidiscrimination statutes and provide
protection even to students who may not be eligible for accommodations.
Specifically, Section 504 and the ADA cover individuals believed by
the college to be disabled and individuals with a record of a disability.
A student meeting either of these definitions, as well as a student
with a current disability who may be eligible for an accommodation,
is protected from intentional discrimination, such as a hostile environment
on the basis of disability, and from exclusion from a program on the
basis of stereotypes.
For the purposes of obtaining an accommodation, the
regulations implementing Section 504 and the language of the ADA contain
the same definition of an individual with a disability. These laws provide
that a "disability" is a physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits a major life activity. "Impairment,"
"major life activity," and "substantial" are all
terms of art, and each must be documented.
Colleges may require a student seeking accommodation
to provide sound documentation for each element of the definition of
disability as well as for the need for any proposed accommodation. Documentation
can be test results, clinical observations, psychoeducational histories,
standard medical diagnostic reports, or any other written materials
provided by someone with pertinent expertise. With the consent of the
students, a telephone call from a disabled student services officer
to a diagnostician may also be a quick and productive way to resolve
conflicts, ambiguities, and shortcomings in written data. The evidence
of disability and the need for a specific accommodation should be logically
connected. (For example, it is not self-evident why an individual with
lower-body mobility impairment needs double time on an examination.)
Qualified professionals should prepare the documentation,
whose age should be appropriate to the disability. Persons with disabilities
that change frequently may have to update their documentation every
few years. Persons whose disabilities are relatively stable would not
be expected to update it as often.
Arbitrary, unnecessarily costly, poorly explained, or
last-minute changes in the documentation required raise concerns for
the courts. Further, privacy interests must be respected. Although meeting
the standards of Section 504 and the ADA may demand considerable documentation,
care must be taken not to seek documentation beyond the scope of what
is necessary to make an accommodation determination. For example, to
establish the impairment of depression, it is not necessary for the
college to know that the depression was originally induced by child
abuse.
Obtaining documentation, the costs of which the student
must almost always bear, can be expensive. Institutions can help by
providing students and their diagnosticians with reasonable notice of
what documentation is expected. When the institution rejects documentation,
the student should be told why so that he or she can determine whether
it makes sense to seek further testing and additional documentation.
Unfortunately, many secondary schools do not explain
to their students that the documentation that established their eligibility
for services from elementary and secondary schools may be insufficient
to establish a disability with a postsecondary institution. Faculty
should therefore respond to the initial expectations of new students
with some flexibility and promptly refer them to the disabled student
services office.
With regard to effective accommodation, the expertise
of both faculty members and the disabled student services office should
be made available to the student. Accommodation expertise is not easy
to come by. In academia, the classroom teacher or department chair will
often be uniquely in control of information essential to identifying
an accommodation that will not fundamentally alter the nature of an
academic program, reduce academic standards, or place an undue burden
on the college.
Types of Accommodation
Most students who document their disability and need
for an accommodation will receive one without conflict or dispute. But
no absolutely accurate statement can be made about whether a particular
accommodation is required by law. The best I can do is provide what
are admittedly broad generalizations based on considerable experience
in the field. For students who have given notice and provided sufficient
documentation, the following accommodations are likely to be sustained:
time and a half to double time on examinations; moderately reduced course
loads; extra time to complete a degree program to the extent curricular
continuity is not unreasonably impaired; limited leaves of absence for
medical treatment and recovery; registration assistance; assistance
in applying for financial aid; classroom modifications, such as preferential
seating, taping, and note-taking assistance; priority in housing for
students who need a single or a large room; and priority in parking
for students with mobility impairments and certain psychological disabilities.
Accommodations less likely to be sustained, but within
the range of accommodations that may be required in a particular set
of circumstances, are more than double time on examinations, long-term
leaves of absence, course substitution or waiver, and reduced participation
and attendance in the classroom. Accommodations unlikely to be sustained
are unlimited time for examinations, unlimited time for degree completion,
unlimited leaves of absence, permission to entirely avoid attendance
expectations applied to students in general, reassignment to another
teacher, provision of examinations or instructional services off campus
except when generally provided to students, individualized instruction
or tutoring except when commonly provided to students, and restructuring
of the curriculum to address the student’s individual learning style.
In my experience, modifications to examinations, particularly
extra time to complete them, rank first in triggering faculty concerns
about treating all students fairly. The objective of providing individuals
extra time on examinations is to measure what students have learned
rather than the impact of their disability. When a student’s performance
speed is a skill a professor intends to measure, extra time on an examination
would not be an appropriate accommodation. Thus one federal court held
that a medical student with a disability may be required to demonstrate
emergency room skills under the same rigorous timed conditions as anyone
else.
A recent federal district court decision concerning
an individual with a learning disability who was denied extra time on
a bar examination, has faced up to the issue of fairness more directly
than any preceding opinion. The court wrote:
[M]uch of the [Bar’s] bias appears to arise from the
assumption that giving extra time to applicants with learning disabilities
gives them an unfair advantage over other applicants. . . . [T]his
assumption is belied by research showing that extra time does not
have a significant impact on the performance of individuals who do
not have learning disabilities. . . . Further, as [the Bar] concedes,
the bar [examination] is not a reading rate test. [The court is] convinced
that extra time provided to learning disabled applicants merely levels
the playing field and allows these individuals to be tested on their
knowledge; it does not provide them with an unfair advantage.
It is instructive to look at how the Supreme Court recently
approached the subject of fairness and accommodation when the issue
arose in one of the most high-stakes, competitive, and prestigious events
in the public eye: a golf championship. Professional golfer Casey Martin,
who has a debilitating mobility impairment, challenged a long-standing
rule of the Professional Golfer’s Association (PGA) prohibiting the
use of carts in championship tournaments. After reviewing expert testimony,
the Court concluded that the essence of golf was "shot-making,"
not walking, and that providing Martin with a cart did not give him
a competitive advantage. The Court was particularly troubled by the
fact that the PGA had rejected Martin’s request out of hand, failing
to take an individualized look at the impact of his disability on endurance
and mobility in comparison to other players.
Benefits to the Academic Community
No doubt, Martin’s case has served as the source of
lively discussion in law schools, but more important is its coverage
in the popular press. His presence on the fairway juxtaposes the condition
of disability with the achievement of athletic excellence. He is a "stereotype
buster." In so many instances, we need only give the disability
community an opportunity to cross the threshold, and disabled individuals
will teach us ways we never envisioned to accomplish critical tasks
and professional responsibilities. My brother taught me how to use the
computer as a "virtual" law library. A student, whose speaking
facility was limited by advanced multiple sclerosis, showed me how he
could "speak" by using a keyboard and a scrolling electronic
sign board placed in the front of the classroom.
Section 504 and the ADA should be welcomed for the opportunities
they offer to postsecondary education for rewarding self-examination.
No other set of laws so entreats academia to take its own temperature,
examine its traditions, and thoughtfully deliberate about which of its
standards are essential and which are merely unexamined habits.
Whether from the insights we achieve from integration
or from self-reflection, the unconventional, nontraditional, innovative
ways in which individuals with disabilities accomplish tasks place us
on new paths that benefit us all. The term "universal design"
signifies inclusive planning, structures, tools, and methods of teaching
that take into account the range of physical and mental characteristics
that spans human diversity. Because flexibility and provision of alternative
approaches to the same objective are an inherent element of universal
design, it gives all individuals, disabled or not, the freedom to choose
the paths that best serve them without marginalizing them through "special"
or segregated treatment.
In architecture, universal design yields ramps that
help every person pushing a stroller or pulling a suitcase on wheels.
Universal design has also fostered Web authoring tools that allow us
simultaneously to communicate on the Internet through the visual, auditory,
and tactile senses. More universal benefits are on the horizon. In instruction,
universal design unsettles the assumption that everyone who is qualified
to attend a particular college is identically and evenly endowed across
all of their intellectual domains. Our colleges are composed of auditory,
visual, linear, and intuitive thinkers. Some students are most adept
at accessing and retaining information, while others’ greatest strength
is in how they process information, however it is acquired. How many
of us can say that our teaching methodologies are sufficiently broad
to address these forms of human variation? Inclusion of individuals
with disabilities crystallizes these issues and entreats us to revisit
time-honored teaching methodologies. For example, facing attrition by
bright students with learning disabilities, some mathematics professors
were inspired to develop new ways to teach mathematics that benefit
all students.
And there is more with regard to the content of our
curricula. The rich literature, art, and history of the disability community
are ripe for addition to academia’s exploration of the human condition.
Creating equal educational opportunity by providing reasonable accommodations
to students with disabilities is a journey we need not fear. Indeed,
it may be embraced for the opportunities it presents to us all.
For more than twenty years, Paul Grossman
has been the chief regional attorney of the San Francisco office of
the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. He is also
adjunct professor of disability law at the University of California’s
Hastings College of Law. Recently, for his work in the field of students
with disabilities, the author received honors from the Department of
Education, the Association for Higher Education and Disability, and
the California Association of Post-Secondary Educators of the Persons
with Disabilities. He wrote this article entirely in his private capacity.
Neither of his employers reviewed or approved the text.