Documentation of a disability must be provided by
a certified or licensed professional with the expertise necessary to make the
determination. In order to provide the best possible accommodation, documentation
including recommendations of accommodations done within the last three years
are most helpful and will be required for accommodation request that require
changes in academic programs such as substitutions or waivers of class requirements.
Anyone seeking support services as a learning disabled student at the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln must have documentation of a learning disability. This documentation
must:
- Be submitted by a professional who is licensed to diagnose a learning disability
(e.g., neurologist, educational psychologist, school psychologist);
- Include the testing/evaluation procedures and test results used to make
a diagnosis of a learning disability;
- Be dated no more than three years prior to the request for services or conducted
after the student's 16th birthday.
The diagnostic assessment preformed to verify a learning disability should
show:
- Significant intracognitive discrepancy (ies) as measured by technically
adequate, standardized instruments of aptitude (e.g., Verbal IQ vs. Performance
IQ, Perceptual Organization vs. Verbal Comprehension on the Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale Revised).
OR
- Significant aptitude-achievement discrepancy (ies) as measured by technically
adequate, standardized instruments of aptitude (e.g., Wechsler Adult Intelligence
Scale-Revised; Woodcock-Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery, Part I) and achievement
(e.g., Woodcock-Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery, Part II; Wide Range Achievement
Test).
High School Individual Educational Plans that do not provide diagnostic
information including actual testing results will not be accepted as adequate
documentation for accommodation planning purposes.
Recent Flickr Photo
- 091107_NU_OU_009

- Posted by: nobody@flickr.com (Official University of Nebraska-Lincoln Site) on 11/8/2009 at 12:23 AM