Documentation
To arrange for services through Students with Disabilities Services,
a student must:
- Apply and be accepted to USF (Degree or non-degree seeking students).
- Provide current and comprehensive documentation, as indicated
below, of a temporary or permanent disability which requires academic
accommodation.
- Include a completed application and coversheet with documentation.
- Register with SDS at the beginning of each semester. (Documentation
is not necessary at this time unless significant changes have
happened since initiating services.)
Documentation of a Disability
Documentation for a disability must be current, complete, and
provided by a qualified professional. All documentation must be
on letterhead, typed, dated, and signed by the qualified professional.
Documentation varies depending on the specific disability and each
student's documentation is individually reviewed.
Minimally, the documentation must establish the current functional
limitations resulting from the disability. The documentation must
provide enough information about the history, scope, and depth of
the disability for the University to determine the presence of a
disabling condition which significantly impairs a major life function
and imposes limitation on some activity associated with the academic
process. A school plan such as an Individualized
Educational Plan (IEP) or a 504
Plan is insufficient documentation in and of itself to determine
eligibility. These school plans may be included as a part of a more
comprehensive evaluative report and are often helpful in describing
students' strengths as well as possible deficits.
The qualifications of the professional providing documentation
need to be clearly indicated and the language by which the disability
is described must be consistent with standard practice within the
profession. A formal diagnosis is expected.
All documentation is reviewed by the professional staff of SDS
and, when necessary, reviewed by consultants with expertise in specific
disability areas. In some cases, students are requested to provide
more documentation than originally submitted. Additionally, recommendations
for accommodations to mitigate the impact of the disability are
appreciated, but are not essential.
Documentation Specifically for Attention
Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Learning Disabilities
(LD)
The provision of appropriate services for students with ADD and
LD require comprehensive documentation which satisfies the customary
practices of most post-secondary Educational institutions in the
United States as well as standardized testing guidelines.
The documentation guidelines are:
Attention Deficit Disorder - Documentation
Guidelines
Documentation necessary to arrange services for ADD must meet
all the criteria stated in the earlier section about disability
documentation and clearly state how the student manifests the disability
in terms of each of the criteria established in the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual, Fourth Edition (DSM - IV) for this
disorder. To be sufficient the documentation must state the diagnosis
and provide specific information about each of the DSM - IV criteria
and how the disability impacts the student at the present time.
Because documentation of ADD follows the Educational Testing Service
(ETS) guidelines, all students, parents, and evaluators are strongly
encouraged to become familiar with the
ETS guidelines for documentation of ADD.
Learning Disabilities - Documentation Guidelines
These are the guidelines of the Association
on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD). As members of AHEAD,
the University of South Florida adheres to these guidelines.
I. Qualifications of the Evaluator
Professionals conducting assessments, rendering diagnoses of learning
disabilities, and making recommendations for appropriate accommodations
must be qualified to do so. Comprehensive training and direct experience
with an adolescent and adult LD population is essential.
The name, title and professional credentials of the evaluator,
including information about license or certification (e.g., licensed
psychologist) as well as the area of specialization, employment
and state/province in which the individual practices should be clearly
stated in the documentation. For example, the following professionals
would generally be considered qualified to evaluate specific learning
disabilities provided that they have additional training and experience
in the assessment of learning problems in adolescents and adults:
clinical or educational psychologists, school psychologists, neuropsychologists,
learning disabilities specialists, medical doctors, and other professionals.
Use of diagnostic terminology indicating a learning disability by
someone whose training and experience are not in these fields is
not acceptable. It is of utmost importance that evaluators are sensitive
and respectful of cultural and linguistic differences in adolescents
and adults during the assessment process. It is not considered appropriate
for professionals to evaluate members of their families. All reports
should be on letterhead, typed, dated, signed and otherwise legible.
II. Documentation
The provision of all reasonable accommodations and services is
based upon assessment of the impact of the student's disabilities
on his or her academic performance at a given time in the student's
life. Therefore, it is in the student's best interest to provide
recent and appropriate documentation relevant to the student's learning
environment.
Flexibility in accepting documentation is important, especially
in settings with significant numbers of non-traditional students.
In some instances, documentation may be outdated or inadequate in
scope or content. It may not address the student's current level
of functioning or need for accommodations because observed changes
may have occurred in the student's performance since the previous
assessment was conducted. In such cases, it may be appropriate to
update the evaluation report. Since the purpose of the update is
to determine the student's current need for accommodations, the
update, conducted by a qualified professional, should include a
rationale for ongoing services and accommodations.
III. Substantiation of the Learning Disability
Documentation should validate the need for services based on the
individual's current level of functioning in the educational setting.
A school plan such as an individualized education program (IEP)
or a 504 plan is insufficient documentation, but it can be included
as part of a more comprehensive assessment battery. A comprehensive
assessment battery and the resulting diagnostic report should include
a diagnostic interview, assessment of aptitude, academic achievement,
information processing and a diagnosis.
A. Diagnostic Interview
An evaluation report should include the summary of a comprehensive
diagnostic interview. Learning disabilities are commonly manifested
during childhood, but not always formally diagnosed. Relevant information
regarding the student's academic history and learning processes
in elementary, secondary and postsecondary education should be investigated.
The diagnostician, using professional judgment as to which areas
are relevant, should conduct a diagnostic interview which may include:
a description of the presenting problem(s); developmental, medical,
psychosocial and employment histories; family history (including
primary language of the home and the student's current level of
English fluency); and a discussion of dual diagnosis where indicated.
B. Assessment
The neuropsychological or psycho-educational evaluation for the
diagnosis of a specific learning disability must provide clear and
specific evidence that a learning disability does or does not exist.
Assessment, and any resulting diagnosis, should consist of and be
based on a comprehensive assessment battery which does not rely
on any one test or subtest.
Evidence of a substantial limitation to learning or other major
life activity must be provided. A list of commonly used tests is
included in Appendix B. Minimally, the domains to be addressed must
include the following:
1. Aptitude
A complete intellectual assessment with all subtests and standard
scores reported.
2. Academic Achievement
A comprehensive academic achievement battery is essential with
all subtests and standard scores reported for those subtests administered.
The battery should include current levels of academic functioning
in relevant areas such as reading (decoding and comprehension),
mathematics, and oral and written language.
3. Information Processing
Specific areas of information processing (e.g., short- and long-term
memory, sequential memory, auditory and visual perception/processing,
processing speed, executive functioning and motor ability) should
be assessed.
Other assessment measures such as non-standard measures and informal
assessment procedures or observations may be helpful in determining
performance across a variety of domains. Other formal assessment
measures may be integrated with the above instruments to help determine
a learning disability and differentiate it from co-existing neurological
and/or psychiatric disorders (i.e., to establish a differential
diagnosis). In addition to standardized tests, it is also very useful
to include informal observations of the student during the test
administration.
C. Specific Diagnosis
Individual "learning styles," "learning differences,"
"academic problems" and "test difficulty or anxiety,"
in and of themselves, do not constitute a learning disability. It
is important to rule out alternative explanations for problems in
learning such as emotional, attentional or motivational problems
that may be interfering with learning but do not constitute a learning
disability. The diagnostician is encouraged to use direct language
in the diagnosis and documentation of a learning disability, avoiding
the use of terms such as "suggests" or "is indicative
of."
If the data indicate that a learning disability is not present,
the evaluator should state that conclusion in the report.
D. Test Scores
Standard scores and/or percentiles should be provided for all normed
measures. Grade equivalents are not useful unless standard scores
and/or percentiles are also included. The data should logically
reflect a substantial limitation to learning for which the student
is requesting the accommodation. The particular profile of the student's
strengths and weaknesses must be shown to relate to functional limitations
that may necessitate accommodations. The tests used should be reliable,
valid and standardized for use with an adolescent/adult population.
The test findings should document both the nature and severity of
the learning disability. Informal inventories, surveys and direct
observation by a qualified professional may be used in tandem with
formal tests in order to further develop a clinical hypothesis.
E. Clinical Summary
A well-written diagnostic summary based on a comprehensive evaluation
process is a necessary component of the report. Assessment instruments
and the data they provide do not diagnose; rather, they provide
important elements that must be integrated by the evaluator with
background information, observations of the client during the testing
situation, and the current context. It is essential, therefore,
that professional judgment be utilized in the development of a clinical
summary. The clinical summary should include:
1. demonstration of the evaluator's having ruled out alternative
explanations for academic problems as a result of poor education,
poor motivation and/or study skills, emotional problems, attentional
problems and cultural/language differences;
2. indication of how patterns in the student's cognitive ability,
achievement and information processing reflect the presence of a
learning disability;
3. indication of the substantial limitation to learning or other
major life activity presented by the learning disability and the
degree to which it impacts the individual in the learning context
for which accommodations are being requested; and
4. indication as to why specific accommodations are needed and
how the effects of the specific disability are accommodated.
The summary should also include any record of prior accommodation
or auxiliary aids, including any information about specific conditions
under which the accommodations were used (e.g., standardized testing,
final exams, licensing or certification examinations).
IV. Recommendations for Accommodations
It is important to recognize that accommodation needs can change
over time and are not always identified through the initial diagnostic
process. Conversely, a prior history of accommodation does not,
in and of itself, warrant the provision of a similar accommodation.
The diagnostic report should include specific recommendations for
accommodations as well as an explanation as to why each accommodation
is recommended. The evaluators should describe the impact the diagnosed
learning disability has on a specific major life activity as well
as the degree of significance of this impact on the individual.
The evaluator should support recommendations with specific test
results or clinical observations.
If accommodations are not clearly identified in a diagnostic report,
the disability service provider should seek clarification and, if
necessary, more information. The final determination for providing
appropriate and reasonable accommodations rests with the institution.
In instances where a request for accommodations is denied in a
postsecondary institution, a written grievance or appeal procedure
should be in place.
V. Confidentiality
The receiving institution has a responsibility to maintain confidentiality
of the evaluation and may not release any part of the documentation
without the student's informed and written consent.
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