Abstract

Students with disabilities face many challenges in their pursuit of higher education. Academic accommodations and other educational supports can allow these students to learn, and to demonstrate their learning, in a manner similar to their classmates without disabilities. The purpose of this study was (1) to determine the percent of students classified with disabilities and receiving accommodations in college and (2) to see if students’ access to accommodations varies as a function of their college’s type, selectivity, and cost. Overall 4.6% of undergraduate students are formally registered with their school’s disability office. Contrary to expectations, the highest percentage of students with disabilities receiving accommodations are found in America’s most selective and expensive private colleges and universities. The prevalence of students with disabilities at private, liberal arts colleges in particular is almost three times higher than the prevalence at two-year public (i.e., community) colleges. These findings suggest that public colleges should be more proactive in identifying and accommodating students with disabilities and private colleges should be more judicious in their accommodation granting. Colleges should also use principles of universal design to promote the academic success of all students, regardless of their disability status.

Highlights

  • Students with disabilities face many challenges in their pursuit of higher education

  • 3.1 Type of College Descriptive statistics indicated that approximately 4.55% (SD = 4.14%) of undergraduate students are formally classified with disabilities

  • We conducted a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) to examine differences in the frequency of students with disabilities as a function of sector

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Summary

Introduction

Students with disabilities face many challenges in their pursuit of higher education. Whereas federal laws require primary and secondary schools to identify students with disabilities and to provide them with academic support and accommodations, colleges and universities do not bear these responsibilities (Lovett, Gordon, & Lewandowski, 2017). It is likely that the percentage of college students receiving accommodations for disabilities varies across postsecondary schools (Mamboleo, Dong, & Fais, 2020). They earned fewer credits than their classmates, especially in the math, science, and foreign language. Students with disabilities failed 7 courses during high school (Newman et al, 2011). Students with disabilities report earning lower grades, taking more remedial courses, and completing fewer advanced academic courses in high school than their classmates

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