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Understand Your Responsibilities

  Your success in college depends on your ability to manage yourself and your situation.

When you enter college, you will be solely responsible for, and in control of, your choices and decisions. At the postsecondary level, you may want to disclose your disability so that you can advocate for your needs and obtain appropriate academic adjustments and auxiliary aids and services. Thus, although parents, teachers, and counselors continue to play supportive roles, the ultimate responsibility for obtaining services lies with you. You decide whether to disclose your disability. However, remember that the college or university you attend is not obligated to provide appropriate academic adjustments and auxiliary aids and services unless you disclose your disability, provide appropriate documentation, and request such assistance.

Colleges are not required to accept students who do not meet the academic standards or other requirements for admission. Disclosing your disability may explain why grades and/or test scores may be inaccurate predictors of your ability to succeed academically. Many institutions apply the same admissions criteria and have identical application procedures for all students. Nonetheless, they may modify application procedures, admissions criteria, and/or the decision-making processes for applicants who disclose their disabilities. The disabilities office also may request additional information for clarification of your abilities, which are what determines your success.

You have several responsibilities in a postsecondary environment that you did not have at the high school level. You need to:

Excerpted from Virginia's College Guide for Students with Disabilities (2003 Edition). Available at http://www.pen.k12.va.us


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