[blindlaw] text of LSAC's letter to accompany non-standard LSAT administration

Stephanie Enyart stephanie_enyart at yahoo.com
Sun May 17 06:36:27 UTC 2009


Hello all,
Since Haben asked about the type of communication that will accompany any
non-standard test (any test taken with extended time due to a disability)
here is a copy of what the LSAC sends with the score report to law schools:

"Dear Colleague:
This candidate took a __fill in test date___ LSAT under nonstandard timing
conditions in order to accommodate his or her disability. The nonstandard
test this candidate received was administered on or about the same test date
as the corresponding standard administration.
Because this candidate's score was earned under nonstandard timing
conditions, it is important to note that the degree of comparability of this
score to scores earned under standard conditions cannot be determined. The
LSAC's Cautionary Policies Concerning LSAT Scores and Related Services
explain:
LSAC has no data to demonstrate that scores earned under accommodated
conditions have the same meaning as scores earned under standard conditions.
Because the LSAT has not been validated in its various accommodated forms,
accommodated tests are identified as nonstandard, and an individual's scores
from accommodated tests are not averaged with scores from tests taken under
standard conditions. The fact that accommodations were granted for the LSAT
should not be dispositive evidence that accommodations should be granted
once a test taker becomes a student. The accommodation needed for a one-day
multiple choice test may be different from those needed for law school
course work and examinations."

-----Original Message-----
From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Haben Girma
Sent: Friday, May 15, 2009 9:39 AM
To: NFBnet Blind Law Mailing List
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] LSAT Accommodations?


Is there a fact sheet out there that reveals what percentage of a 
university's student body is disabled?

Haben

James Pepper wrote:
> They probably do that, I know that one of thee Coolge entrance exams does
> it, but I am not sure if it is the SAT or the ACT but they inform the
> schools eactly which devices were used to take the test.  I think it is
both
> of them.  This is how colleges can know who is disabled and who is not
> without actually asking the student if they are disabled or not.  It is a
> great way to get around the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
> And this is good for colleges that do not have a high percentage of
students
> who are disabled because they will most certainly accept you once they
> realize you are disabled, to satisfy their requirements to not be
considered
> discriminatory.  But your chances of graduating from that situation is not
> as good as a college that accepts the disabled on a regular basis.  Of
> course state schools are more likely to handle the disabled with respect,
> since they are more in tune with the consequences of discriminiation.  But
> if you are competing with a lot of other disabled students to get into a
> college that is a good college for the blind, then you will probably be
> judged on your abilities based on being disabled and not the general
> population.  Because they will probably only admit a certain amount of
> students who are disabled as the disabled tend to cost the university a
lot
> more than non disabled.
>
> Since most people do not know they are doing this type of profiling, they
> have gotten away with it since 1973.
>
> You all are lawyers, can you stop this nonsense because colleges accept
the
> blind and disabled in proportion to their numbers in the population, but
> they don't graduate them in any proportion to the numbers they accept.
>
> James Pepper
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