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Published byPeter Kelly Parrish Modified over 9 years ago
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Managing Accommodations Appeals with ACT and College Board
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BARBARA SAMS Director of College Counseling Special Testing Coordinator Saint Louis Priory School RUSSELL HYKEN, Ph.D. Licensed Personal Counselor School Clinical Consultant, Saint Louis Priory School
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Presentation particularly aimed at schools/students who do not have or use an IEP At Saint Louis Priory School Approximately 15 – 20% of our students have a formal diagnosis (ie, have gone to an appropriate professional and completed full battery of tests) Only accommodations we provide are extended time on exams, and in a limited number of cases, a waiver of Latin III requirement (substitute Classical Cultures Course) This year for the first time, EVERY one of our ACT applications were declined the first time around and 2 students were denied accommodations by College Board
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Incomplete Application If you don’t use IEPs, you must issue a letter stating what accommodations your school provides. This should be done at the beginning of each school year. Insufficient Documentation Poorly Supported Testing (will discuss momentarily) Because sometimes they are right—the student’s condition does not warrant accommodations
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Remember the Length of Time it takes to process an appeal (a minimum of six weeks in most cases) Provide a Cover Letter Letter should highlight why you believe the student should be approved, that is, you highlight the testing results that led to the diagnosis Letter should try to provide something new, such as teacher comments, doctor’s letter of support
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“The scores reported in the evaluation are within normal limits. Scores that are in the average range do not establish that a student has a ‘substantial limitation’...as required for a designation of an ADA disability.” “Our consultants were unable to detect a substantial limitations [sic]...as required by ADA.”
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Average Person Standard of ADA = any score below 88. Also consider if there is standard deviation of more than 1.5 SDs between appropriate scores. (include percentages).
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What is a good evaluation? - Historical information - Proper test selection (ie, quantitative data) - Written observations (ie, qualitative data) - Tested by an “established” professional
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WISC/WAIS – Processing Speed Index WAIT/WJ III – Fluency Other Tests - Rate
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Yearly documentation DSM Diagnosis AXIS I 314 – ADHD 315.1 Mathematics Disorder AXIS II None AXIS III Defer AXIS IV V62.89 Educational Problems AXIS V GAF 55 (GAF) Test every three years
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