FAQ for parents of current and prospective students
Roles and Responsibilities
Any student's role is to successfully transition into an independent adult. We know that students with disabilities face the same challenges as every college bound young adult plus the challenges related to their disability. However, their role still remains to successfully transition into an independent adult. The time for dependence is coming to a close. A student with a disability is responsible for requesting accommodations through DASS. DASS will not seek the students out. A student with a disability is also responsible for providing acceptable documentation of his or her disability. After being approved through DASS, the student is responsible for requesting letters for professors, advocating/disclosing his/her disability to professors in order to receive accommodations, and setting appointments for proctored tests when needed.
For more about the roles and responsibilities of 51²è¹Ý students, faculty members, the DASS office, and the University as a whole, check out our Roles and Responsibilities Chart.
We have some great resources listed on the Parent Resources main page.
Eligibility and Requesting Services
In its most basic form, documentation must be provided by a qualified provider, be current and substantial, and contain a clear diagnosis, functional limitations in an academic environment, and recommendations justified by the nature and severity of the functional limitations.
For definitions of these terms and a list of documentation requirements based on disability type, please refer to Documentation Guidelines.
Differences Between High School and College Level Accommodations
Not necessarily.
While high school IEPs and 504 Plans are useful for showing a history of accommodations, colleges are not legally obligated to follow them. For more information, see the .
At the college level, the student's diagnosis needs to meet the criteria of a “disabling condition.” Any test data needs to support evidence of a current and significant functional limitation that impacts learning, or other aspects of the academic environment. The evaluation must support a link between the disability and the requested accommodation.
Also, not all accommodations granted at the high school level are appropriate in college. Accommodations cannot change the fundamental nature or requirements of a class or course of study. Keep in mind that while high school accommodations and services tend to be geared toward student success, college-level accommodations are meant to provide equal access, and do not guarantee success.
At the start of each semester, students who are eligible for academic accommodations use our online interface, DASS Link, to request their Letters of Accommodation (LOAs). The student then determines what accommodation they want to use in each course, individually. For example, a student may decide not to share with their English Lit instructor that they have testing accommodations since that class that has no exams. DASS receives the student's request for their LOAs, reviews it, and then sends the personalized LOAs to the student's instructors.
Students complete this process by contacting each instructor to work out how accommodations will be implemented in their particular class. Instructors may handle accommodations differently from one another, so this requires a conversation between the student and instructor.
The university requires that students notify faculty with their LOAs at least seven days prior to the need for accommodations, so it's best for students to request their letters as early as possible - we recommend students make the LOA request 1-2 weeks before classes start and speak with all instructors about their accommodations by the end of the 2nd week of classes. In Summer and Intersessions, this process should be completed on or before the first day of class.