Lenore. Of those choices it would have to be b). Can't be a). There really 
isn't much a professor can do without the student self-identifying to the 
college (truth be told it is bordering on, if not, unethical to do so). c) is a 
cop-out, imho. And as I said about a) it may well be unethical (depending on 
your interpretation of rules, law, and your particular college's way of dealing 
with it). It is clearly my reading of the law and our state's and college's 
rules that the student must identify themselves to the college and then it is 
the college's resources that provide help. Of course some professors are better 
at knowing what to do once those resources are provided and we should consider 
ourselves a part of those resources. Just my two cents. Tim


-----Original Message-----
From:   Frigo, Lenore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:   Wed 2/23/2005 1:56 PM
To:     Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Cc:     
Subject:        students with disabilities

Just a quick survey question and I'll be happy for as many back-channel answers 
as I can get.

At your college/university, when a student has a disability for which they need 
accommodation, is this determination made by

a) individual instructors
b) a centralized unit (such as disabled student services)
c) either, depending on the student's preference

Thanks,
Lenore Frigo
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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