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![]() Section 1983 (Civil Action for the Deprivation of Rights) permits a plaintiff to receive a jury trial and to be awarded damages where state action is responsible for a violation of federal constitutional or statutory rights (see Thomas & Russo, 1995, pp. That law requires states to provide for the equal protection of persons within their respective jurisdictions and to give due process any time state action could adversely affect life, liberty, or property. ![]() Prior to 1973, the only federal law that provided extensive protection for persons with disabilities was the Fourteenth Amendment. Legal protection for college students with disabilities Finally, guidelines are presented that may be used by professors and administrators in their efforts to provide qualified students with disabilities with nondiscriminatory access to higher education. Organizationally, this article briefly reviews Section 504 and the ADA and identifies the criteria that are used to determine whether a student is “disabled.” Then, specific areas of admission, accommodation, and dismissal are examined. However, such units often are inadequately funded, given the growth in the number of students requesting accommodation, and seldom have experts on staff who are knowledgeable about the wide range of disabilities that colleges are now attempting to accommodate. This and similar units are responsible for reviewing documentation provided by students and for making a determination as to eligibility status and appropriate accommodations and adjustments, if any. This situation is ameliorated somewhat by the assistance provided by administrative units such as Student Disability Services (SDS). University of Vermont, 1992), and in the same way, and are ill-prepared either to adapt their instruction to address the individual needs of students or to identify appropriate, fair, and reasonable accommodations. ![]() Many professors prefer that all students meet the same set of requirements, within the same time period (see, e.g., Morse v. Over the years, there has been considerable resistance by professors to alter the way they instruct, particularly if such alteration were to accommodate a student with a mental, as compared to a physical, disability. The growth in the number of students with learning disabilities has created a new challenge to professors and colleges. Over 35% of the freshmen in 1996 who reported having a disability were purported to have a learning disability - an increase from 24.9% in 1991 (HEATH Resource Center, 1998). Of particular significance in recent years has been the growth in the number of students with learning disabilities. The greater demand for accommodation can be attributed primarily to the fact that many current college students received either an Individualized Education Program (IEP as is required by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1990 IDEA) or a service plan (as is required by Section 504) while in elementary and secondary schools, and have become increasingly aware of their rights to accommodation while in higher education. ![]() Presumably, this increase in part is because of the slightly broader coverage of the ADA, publicity surrounding the passage of the ADA, an increase in the number of administrative appeals and lawsuits, and growth in the number of students requesting accommodation. ![]() Only modest progress was made between 1973 (the passage of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act) and 1990 (the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act ADA) however, once the ADA was passed and amended and regulations were promulgated, institutions that had made little or no progress in making their buildings and programs accessible increased their efforts. Although the process has been slow, colleges and universities (hereafter referred to as 11 colleges”) have made their programs more and more accessible, sometimes in good faith, sometimes due to coercion by federal agencies and courts. That figure represents over 9% of all freshmen (HEATH Resource Center, 1998), as compared with only 2.6% in 1978 (HEATH Resource Center, 1995). Today, there are more students with documented disabilities in higher education than ever before - 140,142 freshmen reported having a disability in 1996 (HEATH Resource Center, 1998). ![]()
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