
Learning Resources Center |
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The Learning Resource Center (LRC) provides individualized services
for students with specific learning disabilities and attention
deficit (hyperactivity) disorders (ADD/ADHD). Recommendations, along
with supporting documentation, will be incorporated in an
Individualized Service Plan (ISP) to be developed by the student and
the LRC Director. Records will remain on file in the LRC. Incoming
students should request accommodations upon completion of a class
schedule. Returning students should pre-register each semester and
request accommodations at that time. In all cases, students should
make requests for accommodations not less than four weeks prior to
the date that the services will begin.
Conduct rules and attendance policies apply to all students
regardless of disabilities. Technical standards are essentials to
which all students must adhere in a program of study. Students with
disabilities may be eligible for accommodations; however, these
students are still required to meet all of a program's technical
standards. Applicants should be aware that certain programs and
degrees require the ability to perform specific critical skills.
Some students may not be admitted to or able to complete a program
or degree because their disability cannot be accommodated in a
manner that enables them to perform the required critical skills and
meet the critical standards of the program. Students should, prior
to applying for or beginning a program of study, review all
requirements that are necessary for completion of the program.
ADA POLICY
Oglethorpe is committed to making its programs and activities
accessible to persons with disabilities. Oglethorpe recognizes that
this commitment permit a greater contribution of people with
disabilities to our society through educational benefits, job
opportunities and public access. It also provides a safer and more
pleasant environment. Oglethorpe has developed a disability
anti-discrimination policy to ensure compliance with relevant
disability anti-discrimination laws and regulations
(see Appendix A).
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES
Students must register and request services from the LRC Director at
the LRC 404.364.8869, which is located in Goodman Hall. Denials may
be appealed to the ADA Coordinator 404.364.8325. Students registered
with LRC should meet deadlines and procedural requirements
established by LRC and Oglethorpe.
PROCEDURES FOR OBTAINING LRC SERVICES
The following methods have been established to meet the needs of
students with learning disabilities and attention deficit disorders
at Oglethorpe:
- All students must meet established university admission
requirements and program technical standards.
- The office of Admission sends a Self-Identification form in
each acceptance packet sent to a student.
- To register for accommodations, a student with a learning
disability or attention deficit disorder should return the
completed Self-Identity form and documentation of disability to
the Learning Resource Center (LRC) Director. Denials may be
appealed to the Associate Dean for Administration, who is the ADA
Coordinator.
- The LRC Director meets with the student to assess needs and
develop an Individualized Service Plan (ISP). All information is
kept in strict confidence.
- The LRC Director makes arrangements with service providers and
/or makes purchases of auxiliary aids and materials that are
supported by documentation and determined by the LRC to be
reasonable.
- The LRC Director provides an accommodation letter to the
student. To maintain confidentiality, letters are given to the
instructors by the student.
- Students should meet with each professor to discuss needs and
how to implement identified accommodations. The LRC Director will
be available to assist as required.
- The professor should assist the student with identifying an
in-class note taker, and make arrangements for alternate testing
(e.g. extended time, distraction-free environments, etc.)
- The LRC Director will provide or recommend other measures,
such as learning strategies workshops, which will assist the
student in achieving academic success.
PROCEDURES FOR ADDRESSING ISSUES OF CONCERN
Oglethorpe has developed means for persons with disabilities to seek
resolution of any grievance arising out of perceived discrimination
on the basis of disability. Students registered with LRC should take
the following steps to resolve issues of concern and complaints of
discrimination based on disability:
- The student should discuss his/her problem with the instructor
of the course or appropriate department representative (academic
or non-academic) directly, unless extenuating circumstances
prohibit doing so.
- If a conversation with the course instructor or department
representative does not resolve the concerns, the student should
then discuss the problem with the head of that department.
- If a meeting with the head of the department does not resolve
the grievance, the student should discuss issues of concern with
the LRC Director.
- If the LRC Director is unable to assist in resolving the
problem(s), the student will be advised to file a formal
complaint, in writing, with the Associate Dean for Administration.
ACADEMIC ADJUSTMENTS
Except as described below, Oglethorpe University Policies shall not
be waived nor exceptions made for students with disabilities.
Instead, means shall be sought to assist students in meeting
requirements through special accommodations and modifications of
instructional techniques and testing procedures. Prior historical
accommodations without documentation of clear current need does not
in and of itself provide for corresponding accommodations.
The LRC Director will consider requests for academic adjustments in
campus policy, and will make recommendations based on a diagnosis of
a specific learning disability and/or ADD/ADHD. Students will be
required to provide evidence of evaluations that substantiate the
disability. Each student requesting services because of learning
disabilities must provide sufficient diagnosis from a qualified
clinician with expertise in assessing such disorders in college-aged
adolescents or adults. Evaluations will be used only to assist the
university in determining accommodations. Information received
directly from a provider will not be released to a
student/applicant.
If a student's disability precludes the acquisition of a foreign
language, appropriate substitutions may be made. Recommendations may
contain skills-building for mastery of tasks and/or compensatory
measures that will assist the student in achieving academic success
including, but not limited to:
- Early/Priority registration
- Learning-strategies workshop
- Alternate-testing format
- Auxiliary services
- Auxiliary aids
THE ACCOMMODATION OF STUDENTS WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES AND
ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDERS
Existing documentation of learning disability shall be reviewed as a
part of the evaluation process if it meets the "Criteria For
Accepting Evaluations" described below. Secondary education
eligibility reports, individualized educational plans and provision
of special education services in and of themselves are not
sufficient documentation for college-level accommodations, although
this information should be included with reports from any
comprehensive evaluation. If no prior services or accommodations
have been provided, this needs to be carefully explained as learning
disabilities and related disorders are not typically newly
identified in adulthood. Additional diagnostics may be required.
TESTING FOR LEARNING DISABILITIES AND ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDERS
Prior to receiving services, accepted or enrolled students who do
not have appropriate documentation that meets the "Criteria For
Accepting Evaluations" must obtain an evaluation and assessment from
a qualified clinician with expertise in assessing such disorders in
college-aged adolescents or adults. The student will be responsible
for the cost of the evaluation.
INFORMATION FOR EVALUATORS - DEFINITION AND EVALUATION CRITERIA
Oglethorpe University (OU) Learning Resource Center (LRC) has
established criteria to define and evaluate learning disabilities
that are generally consistent with locally recognized general
guidelines. In addition, clinicians might also review the
Association of Higher Education Administrators of Disabilities
(AHEAD) Guidelines for Documentation of a Learning Disability or the
Guidelines and Questionnaire for Test Accommodations for Examinees
with Disabilities prepared by the United States Medical Licensing
Examination Board (www.nbme.org), as they provide similar but more
detailed guidance regarding the criteria used for evaluating
documentation of learning disabilities for these organizations. The
OU policies are generally consistent with these nationally
recognized general guidelines, although specific criteria within the
OU policy may differ. A definition that was originally published by
the Interagency Committee on Learning Disabilities (1987) has been
adopted as being in keeping with current practices of most state and
federal guidelines. The following definition shall serve as the
basis for diagnosis at Oglethorpe University:
Learning disabilities is a generic term
that refers to a heterogeneous group of disorders manifested by
significant difficulties in the acquisition and use of listening,
speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or mathematical abilities, or
of social skills. These disorders are intrinsic to the individual
and presumed to be due to central nervous system dysfunction. Even
though a learning disability may occur concomitantly with other
handicapping conditions (e.g., sensory impairment, mental
retardation, social and emotion disturbance), with
socio-environmental influences (e.g., cultural differences,
insufficient or inappropriate instruction, psychogenic factors), and
especially with attention deficit disorder, all of which may cause
learning problems, a learning disability is not the direct result of
those conditions or influences. (Interagency Committee on Learning
Disabilities [1987]).
This definition may be modified in the future to be consistent
with any changes made by the Interagency Committee on Learning
Disabilities. The current definition does not include social skills
deficits and attention deficit disorders as learning disabilities,
and it supports the cognitive or information processing deficit
model of learning disabilities in that deficits in basic academic
areas are due to an underlying deficit in a related cognitive or
information processing system. Academic area deficits that do not
have a correlated cognitive or processing deficit are not considered
to represent a specific learning disability. Therefore, learning
disabilities may be identified in the following academic areas:
reading, writing, spelling, mathematics, and language. Deficits in
specific course topics would not be expected, although a student
with a reading and/or writing disability may have difficulty in any
course with heavy reading or writing requirements.
The following cognitive or processing domains are typically
identified as areas of specific deficits in such students:
Language - including auditory
discrimination or processing, phonological awareness, comprehension,
expression, naming, or related linguistic functions.
Visual-Spatial - including analysis and synthesis of spatial
information, visual perception/processing.
Memory - including auditory, visual, verbal, or spatial
modalities. Deficits may appear in either short-term, sequential,
working or long-term memory functions
Fine motor/dexterity skills.
Executive Functions - including concept formation, problem
solving, processing speed, mental flexibility, and
organizational/planning abilities.
Attention - including the ability to focus on relevant
information to the exclusion of irrelevant information, ability to
switch attention and maintain attention.
The criteria a student must exhibit are one or more, but not
all, areas of specific academic deficits as stated above; a
correlated cognitive or processing deficit which is related to the
academic deficit; and average intellectual ability.
To be considered an area of academic deficit, a student's
individually administered standardized achievement test results must
fall at least a standard deviation below the student's intellectual
abilities, or a standard deviation below the student's other
academic abilities as assessed by the same measures.
Average intellectual abilities will be defined as the student's best
verbal or nonverbal domain score (for example, either the
Performance IQ or Verbal IQ on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence
Scale-III (WAIS-III) on a standardized global measure of
intelligence. A standard IQ score of 90 or above will be considered
in the average range.
A correlated cognitive or processing deficit must be demonstrated on
multiple independent tests of cognitive functioning in a specific
cognitive or processing area (as listed above), which is documented
with measures in addition to and evidence obtained from the global
IQ test. The deficit must represent a logical basis for the academic
deficit. For example, one would not expect a specific fine motor
deficit to be directly linked to a reading disability.
Professional clinical judgment and interpretation must be part of
any assessment made by a clinician with expertise in assessing such
disorders in adults. This is particularly important in the case of
minority or international students involved in standardized testing.
Consideration of a student's cultural, linguistic, and international
status must be included in any evaluation results. The use of any
particular eligibility formula for learning disabilities at the
post-secondary educational level has not been validated in research
at this time. Therefore, the use of any such objective formulas
using just test scores is unwarranted and problematic.
CRITERIA FOR ACCEPTING EXISTING EVALUATIONS
- Documentation must be within 3 years of the student's
application for assistance. (The exception to this guideline in
some instances is if the evaluation was completed after the
student was 18 years of age and the evaluation utilized
appropriate adult standardized tests and is still considered by
the LRC to adequately represent an individual's current
functioning.) Documentation must be comprehensive, including
history, diagnostic interviews, test results (including
standardized test scores when available), differential diagnosis,
details regarding a student's functional limitations, and
recommendations for accommodations which are appropriate in
college, graduate or professional educational settings.
- A specific learning disability must be stated within the
documentation submitted. The criteria a student must exhibit are
one or more, but not all, areas of specific academic deficits; a
correlated cognitive or information processing deficit; and
average intellectual ability. If another diagnosis is applicable,
it should be stated. The evaluation must be signed by a
professional with expertise in evaluating adult populations and
appropriately licensed by the state.
- One of the following individually administered general
intelligence tests must have been utilized.
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS-III)
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-III (WISC-III)
Stanford Binet IV
Kaufman Adult Intelligence Test (KAIT)
Differential Ability Scales (DAT)
Please list subscale scores.
- Cognitive or information processing strengths, weaknesses, and
deficits should be specifically discussed. Clear documentation of
deficit areas is necessary in order for colleges to provide
appropriate modifications. Please discuss all of the following
processing areas:
a. Visual-spatial abilities
b. Memory
c. Fine motor/dexterity
d. Executive Functions (It is also helpful to know about the
student's cognitive or processing flexibility and automaticity
with cognitive and academic tasks.)
e. Attention
- The correlated cognitive or processing deficit must be
demonstrated on multiple independent tests of cognitive
functioning in a specific cognitive or processing area (as listed
above), which is documented with measures in addition to and
evidence obtained from the global IQ test. The deficit must
represent a logical basis for the academic deficit. For example,
one would not expect a specific fine motor deficit to be directly
linked to a reading disability.
- Oral language skills should be assessed and discussed. Formal
language evaluation and/or an informal analysis of a language
sample are appropriate. Colleges are primarily interested in
whether or not a student's language disability is impacting oral
or written language and/or if a separate speech disorder is also
present. The assessment of auditory comprehension is also helpful.
- Social-emotional status should be assessed and discussed.
Formal assessment instruments and/or clinical interview are
appropriate. LRC needs to know differential diagnoses of
psychological disorders that impact upon academics from learning
disabilities (e.g., anxiety, mood disorders, substance abuse).
College is typically quite stressful for students who have
learning disorders. In an attempt to best serve students, it is
also helpful to know about their personality characteristics,
psychological welfare, self-esteem and stress level.
- Achievement assessment in the following areas is required:
a. Written Language (spelling and written expression). If a
written language sample is available to review, this is most
helpful.
b. Reading (decoding, word attack, and comprehension). Please
indicate the student's ability to comprehend longer passages, more
typical of college text than some assessment instruments provide,
and their automaticity and fluency in reading appropriate level
texts.
c. Mathematics (applied word problems, calculations, algebra).
Please indicate whether or not the student was successful with
algebra problems. Scores rarely provide this. For example,
students can score within the low average range on the WRAT
without attempting any of the algebra problems.
- Assessment instruments must have age appropriate norms for
high school seniors/college freshmen or older nontraditional
students. All standardized measures must be represented by
standard scores and percentile ranks based on published norms.
These can certainly be supplemented by informal assessment.
ATTENTION DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDERS (ADHD)
In order to be eligible for accommodations because of ADHD, students
must meet the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria of the American Psychiatric
Association (APA) and must meet the following criteria for
documentation adopted by the Learning Resource Center (LRC):
- Assessment on which the documentation or evaluation is based
must have been completed no more than three years prior to the
student's application for academic assistance, OR must have been
completed as an adult (18 years old or older) and still be
considered current.
- Developmental history that is documented, using independent
sources, of appropriate symptoms and problem behaviors across
multiple settings (i.e., past evaluations, school records, teacher
report).
- Documentation of current symptoms that meet diagnostic
criteria (clinical interview, behavior rating scales).
- Documentation of both childhood and current adult behavior on
rating scales of ADHD symptoms that have appropriate age norms
(Norms-based behavior rating scales -- actual data required).
- Corroboration of current ADHD symptoms across multiple
settings by two independent observers with knowledge of the
student's functioning (e.g., parent, spouse, teacher, supervisor,
co-worker, relative, and/or clinician observation).
- Clear evidence and documentation of interference with
developmentally appropriate academic, social, or vocational
functioning.
- All other psychiatric or medical disorders that may cause
problems with inattention are differentially evaluated,
documented, and considered in the differential diagnosis. This is
particularly important when mood, anxiety, or substance abuse
disorders are involved. Other causes of problems with attention
and concentration must be considered and discussed (i.e., test
anxiety). A positive response to medication is not by itself
considered diagnostic.
All documentation must include a specific diagnosis of ADHD and
provide the evidence used to meet the above seven criteria. It is
important for all evaluations to state clearly how ADHD functionally
impacts the student's life across settings, creates a substantial
limitation in learning, and provide a clear rationale why specific
accommodations are needed to mediate its impact.
ACCOMMODATION OF STUDENTS WITH OTHER (Non-LD/ADHD) DISABILITIES
The ADA Coordinator serves students with disabilities other than
those diagnosed as specific learning disabilities and attention
deficit disorders. The following procedures are for the
accommodation of students with other disabilities.
ACQUIRED BRAIN IMPAIRMENT
Students with acquired brain impairment may be eligible for the same
accommodations to University Policy and Procedures as students with
developmental learning disabilities. Students requesting
accommodations must provide to the LRC appropriate documentation of
their medical history and cognitive deficits/abilities as related to
academic functioning. The LRC may review each student's existing
documentation and may require additional testing.
VISUAL, HEARING, MOTOR OR MOBILITY IMPAIRMENTS
Course and testing accommodations will be made for students with a
documented visual, hearing, motor or mobility impairment. Students
with such disabilities must provide appropriate documentation from a
qualified professional that verifies a condition that substantially
limits a major life activity in the academic setting.
PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS
Students with psychiatric disorders, as defined by the DSM IV, may
be eligible for appropriate course and testing accommodations
according to University Policy and Procedures if there is a
documented impact on their academic and related functioning. For
consideration for accommodations, students must provide current
documentation that includes an evaluation by an appropriate licensed
professional (psychiatrist, licensed psychologist, neurologist) with
expertise and training in psychiatric diagnosis. This documentation
must make a definitive diagnosis, state the nature of the functional
impairment involved, and document the differential diagnoses that
were considered and ruled out. Documentation must also address the
length and severity of impairment, how it currently manifests in
substantial limitations in academics, and include suggestions for
appropriate accommodations.
OTHER DISABILITIES
Students with documented permanent or temporary disabilities as
defined in ADA/504 who are other qualified and are not covered by
the existing procedures described above may be eligible for
accommodations. Existing documentation will be reviewed; however,
additional documentation may be required.
STUDENTS WITH LEARNING DIFFICULTIES UNRELATED TO A DISABILITY
Students without documented disabilities who are experiencing
learning difficulties may participate in LRC skills-building
courses, workshops and seminars as appropriate.
DISABILITY ANTI-DISCRIMINATION POLICY FOR PROGRAMS AND SERVICES
It is the policy of Oglethorpe to ensure that all university goods,
services, facilities, privileges, advantages and accommodations are
meaningfully accessible to qualified persons with disabilities in
accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990,
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and other pertinent
federal, state and local disability anti-discrimination laws.
Oglethorpe will provide persons with disabilities an equal
opportunity to participate in and benefit from programs and services
as afforded to other individuals. This is done in the most
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of the individual with a
disability.
Where readily achievable, architectural and communication barriers
will be removed. New structures will comply fully with all
accessibility requirements. Alterations will comply to the maximum
extent feasible. Oglethorpe will make available auxiliary aids and
services, as appropriate to the individual and required by the ADA,
at no cost to the individual, provided that such auxiliary aids and
services do not require significant difficulty or expense.
Oglethorpe does not discriminate against any person who is related
to or associated with a person with a disability. Oglethorpe will
comply with any federal, state or local laws that provide
individuals with disabilities greater protection, and take other
actions necessary to ensure equal opportunity for persons with
disabilities.
This policy applies to the goods, services, privileges, advantages
and accommodations offered by Oglethorpe either directly or through
contractual, licensing or other arrangements. This policy is neither
exhaustive nor exclusive.
Reasonable accommodations will be made on an individualized basis.
It is the responsibility of persons with disabilities, however, to
seek available assistance and to make their needs known.
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