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AHEAD best practices
disability documentation in higher education |
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The Use and Purposes of Documentation
Laws that protect individuals with disabilities from discrimination
and mandate the availability of accommodations to ameliorate
the impact of the disability are in place in most countries.
In order to determine whether an individual is entitled to these
protections, post-secondary institutions typically require objective
evidence (documentation) that verifies that the individual’s
condition fits the locally (and for that local, legally) accepted
definition of “disability.”
Documentation serves two primary purposes in postsecondary education:
- To establish protection from discrimination:
Non-discrimination is an assurance that individuals
with disabilities will not be excluded or provided lesser
access to programs and
activities based on assumptions rooted in stereotype or perception
of ability that are not based in fact. Non-discrimination
also provides freedom from harassment based on perceptions
of disability.
Documentation needed only for protection from discrimination
based on disability can be quite brief. A diagnostic statement
from an appropriate professional, a past history of recognition
as a person with a disability or even self-identification that
indicates how others might regard the individual as having a
disability could suffice as the basis for protection from discrimination.
AND
- To determine the accommodations to which the individual may
be entitled
Reasonable accommodations include modifications
to policy, procedure or practice and the provision of auxiliary
aids and services
that are designed to provide equal access to programs and
services for qualified individuals with disabilities. Accommodations
are
reasonable when they do not fundamentally alter the nature
of a program or service and do not represent an undue financial
or administrative burden.
Disability documentation for the purpose
of providing accommodations must both establish disability
and
provide adequate
information
on the functional impact of the disability so that effective
accommodations can be identified. In the context of postsecondary
education, documentation should provide a decision-maker
with a basic understanding of the individual’s disability and
enough information to anticipate how the current impact of the
disability is expected to interact with the institution’s
structure of courses, testing methods, program requirements,
etc.
Definitions of Disability
Definitions of disability differ widely both between countries
and across contexts within individual countries. A cluster of
widely accepted international definitions have evolved. First
published in 1980, the World Health Organization’s International
Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is
widely accepted for research and policy development and often
used at an institutional level to verify status as a person with
a disability. The ICF identifies three levels of human functioning:
the body (or body part), the whole person, and the whole person
in a social context. Disability is defined as dysfunctioning
at one or more of these same levels: impairments, activity limitations
and participation restrictions.
http://www3.who.int/icf/icftemplate.cfm
Established by the U.N. in 1982 to support the
full and effective participation of persons with disabilities
in social life, promote
equal access to employment, education, information, goods and
services; and protect the dignity of persons with disabilities,
The World Program of Action for Disabled Persons emphasizes that
disability is socially created and not simply an attribute of
the individual. Disability results from a dynamic interaction
between health conditions and other personal factors (such as
age, sex, personality or level of education) on the one hand,
and social and physical environmental factors on the other hand.
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/enable/diswpa00.htm
Building on this definition, the Working Group drafting the
U.N. Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights
and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities developed the following
definition:
“Disability: the loss or limitation of opportunities to
take part in the life of the community on an equal level with
others due
to physical, social, attitudinal and cultural barriers encountered
by persons having physical, sensory, psychological, developmental,
learning, neurological or other impairments (including the presence
in the body of an organism or agent causing malfunction or disease),
which may be permanent, temporary, episodic or transitory in
nature.”
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/enable/rights/wgcontrib-chair1.htm#2
Elements of these international definitions can be seen in the
laws and customs of individual countries and lead the service
provider to the types of information necessary to evaluate the
presence of a disability and understand its impact in context.
Examples:
- The United States’ Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
defines “disability” as “having a physical
or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of
the major life activities.” The ADA protects individuals
from discrimination if they have a record of such impairments
or if they are regarded as having such impairments. Additionally,
specific protections are guaranteed through Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (amended, 1978).
http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm
- The Canadian Charter of Human Rights recognizes medically
certified conditions and injury as disabling factors and includes
them as prohibited grounds of discrimination. While the only
legislation that explicitly defines disability is the Employment
Equity Act, Canadian laws are designed to protect persons with
both mental and physical disabilities against discrimination
and to ensure accessibility to persons with disabilities.
http://www.canadianheritage.gc.ca/progs/pdp-hrp/canada/guide/index_e.cfm
- In the United Kingdom, the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA)
defines a disabled person as someone with "a physical or
mental impairment which has a substantial and long-term adverse
effect on his ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities." Protection
from discrimination, the right to reasonable accommodations and
the obligation to make permanent physical adjustments to premises
are all components of the DDA.
http://www.disability.gov.uk/dda/
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