[LearningDisabilities 1510] DAY TWO- TransitionArlyn Roffman aroffman at lesley.eduFri Nov 9 12:16:24 EST 2007
Hello again for DAY TWO of our focus on transition! As we move through the day, I¹ll be addressing more of your questions and comments from yesterday (there was some lovely, lively discussion last evening!). But I thought I¹d lay some groundwork first, having promised to focus on students¹ legal rights and responsibilities, how teachers can help students participate in the transition planning process, and what adult educators might expect students to know if they have been on an IEP in high school. Later we¹ll also talk a bit about what adult educators can do to help those who have not been diagnosed and served under IDEA with transition-related skills. It¹s very important that teens in transition and their families understand that IDEA does not apply to higher education. Colleges do not offer ³special education²; they are not required to design special programs for students with disabilities and are not legally mandated to provide individual aides or tutors. Colleges instead provide ³disability services.² Under Section 504 of the Vocational Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, discrimination based on disability is prohibited. ³Otherwise qualified² students with disabilities (students who have equivalent qualifications to non-disabled applicants) must have equal access--through the provision of ³reasonable accommodations² or auxiliary aids--to the full range of educational programs and activities offered to all students on campus. Disability laws ensure access, but students must still meet the university¹s standards for admissions, course content, and graduation; these standards do not have to be altered for students with disabilities. The major thing students need to know is that they are only protected if they self-identify and provide documentation of their disability. For students who choose not to self-identify and struggle academically, there is no retroactive protection - they could well find themselves in major academic danger. All of this is paralleled in the work world. The same laws apply. The ADA protects against discrimination based on disability in all aspects of employment, including recruitment, application, hiring, promotion, transfer, layoff, termination, and leaves. It requires employers with fifteen or more employees to provide qualified individuals with disabilities an equal opportunity to benefit from the full range of employment-related options available to others. People with LD do qualify under the ADA, since their disability substantially limits one or more major life activities, in this case work. Section 504 states that "no qualified individual with a disability in the United States shall be excluded from, denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under" any program or activity that receives Federal financial assistance. Qualified individuals with disabilities must be able to meet the normal and essential eligibility requirements of the position for which they are hired and, with reasonable accommodations, perform the ³essential functions² of the job. Again the clincher is that the person must disclose and provide documentation that accommodations are needed. The systems that have nurtured and protected him or her under IDEA no longer apply, and the people who have been available to meet disability-related needs will no longer be available. It is a harsh reality; youth with LD must understand that when they enter the adult world, they will be left to their own devices to contend with this invisible disability. They may well be eligible for adult services, such as vocational rehabilitation but, again, they need to reach out for what they need, and eligibility must be determined by each adult service agency. So, to the question posed by Patrick Mulvihill re: the skills needed for transitioning from a ³world of entitlement² to a ³world of eligibility², I come back to the need for self-advocacy! Students must understand and accept their LD, must be familiar with their rights and responsibilities under Section 504 and the ADA, and must be able to both disclose and ask for what they need in terms of accommodations and modifications. In my next post, I¹ll talk a bit more about how teachers can go about preparing students for this major shift from entitlement. In the meantime, what are you folks doing to help your students in this regard? We¹d love to hear what has worked and what hasn¹t as you¹ve worked with students in this area! Best to you all- Arlyn Roffman
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