Higher Education's Obligations Under Section 504 and Title II of the ADA
U.S. Department of Education
Office for Civil Rights
Washington, D.C.
Revised September 1998
Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973
In 1973, Congress passed Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973 (Section 504), a law that prohibits discrimination on the basis of
physical or mental disability (29 U.S.C. Section 794). It states:
No
otherwise qualified individual with a disability in the United States . . .
shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from the
participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance .
The Office for Civil Rights in the U.S. Department of Education
enforces regulations implementing Section 504 with respect to programs and
activities that receive funding from the Department. The Section 504 regulation
applies to all recipients of this funding, including colleges, universities,
and postsecondary vocational education and adult education programs. Failure by
these higher education schools to provide auxiliary aids to students with
disabilities that results in a denial of a program benefit is discriminatory
and prohibited by Section 504.
Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA)
prohibits state and local governments from discriminating on the basis of
disability. The Department enforces Title II in public colleges, universities,
and graduate and professional schools. The requirements regarding the provision
of auxiliary aids and services in higher education institutions described in
the Section 504 regulation are generally included in the general
nondiscrimination provisions of the Title II regulation.
Postsecondary School
Provision of Auxiliary Aids
The Section 504 regulation contains the following requirement
relating to a postsecondary school's obligation to provide auxiliary aids to qualified
students who have disabilities:
A
recipient . . . shall take such steps as are necessary to ensure that no
handicapped student is denied the benefits of, excluded from participation in,
or otherwise subjected to discrimination under the education program or
activity operated by the recipient because of the absence of educational
auxiliary aids for students with impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills.
The Title II regulation states:
A public
entity shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids and services where necessary to
afford an individual with a disability an equal opportunity to participate in,
and enjoy the benefits of, a service, program, or activity conducted by a
public entity.
It is, therefore, the school's responsibility to provide these
auxiliary aids and services in a timely manner to ensure effective
participation by students with disabilities. If students are being evaluated to
determine their eligibility under Section 504 or the ADA, the recipient must
provide auxiliary aids in the interim.
Postsecondary Student
Responsibilities
A postsecondary student with a disability who is in need of
auxiliary aids is obligated to provide notice of the nature of the disabling
condition to the college and to assist it in identifying appropriate and
effective auxiliary aids. In elementary and secondary schools, teachers and
school specialists may have arranged support services for students with
disabilities. However, in postsecondary schools, the students themselves must
identify the need for an auxiliary aid and give adequate notice of the need.
The student's notification should be provided to the appropriate representative
of the college who, depending upon the nature and scope of the request, could
be the school's Section 504 or ADA coordinator, an appropriate dean, a faculty
advisor, or a professor. Unlike elementary or secondary schools, colleges may
ask the student, in response to a request for auxiliary aids, to provide
supporting diagnostic test results and professional prescriptions for auxiliary
aids. A college also may obtain its own professional determination of whether
specific requested auxiliary aids are necessary.
Examples of Auxiliary
Aids
Some of the various types of auxiliary aids and services may
include:
- taped texts
- notetakers
- interpreters
- readers
- videotext
displays
- television
enlargers
- talking
calculators
- electronic
readers
- Braille
calculators, printers, or typewriters
- telephone
handset amplifiers
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- closed caption
decoders
- open and
closed captioning
- voice
synthesizers
- specialized
gym equipment
- calculators or
keyboards with large buttons
- reaching
device for library use
- raised-line
drawing kits
- assistive
listening devices
- assistive
listening systems
- telecommunications
devices for deaf persons.
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Technological advances in electronics have improved vastly
participation by students with disabilities in educational activities. Colleges
are not required to provide the most sophisticated auxiliary aids available;
however, the aids provided must effectively meet the needs of a student with a
disability. An institution has flexibility in choosing the specific aid or
service it provides to the student, as long as the aid or service selected is
effective. These aids should be selected after consultation with the student who
will use them.
Effectiveness of
Auxiliary Aids
No aid or service will be useful unless it is successful in
equalizing the opportunity for a particular student with a disability to
participate in the education program or activity. Not all students with a
similar disability benefit equally from an identical auxiliary aid or service.
The regulation refers to this complex issue of effectiveness in several
sections, including:
Auxiliary
aids may include taped texts, interpreters or other effective methods of making
orally delivered materials available to students with hearing impairments,
readers in libraries for students with visual impairments, classroom equipment
adapted for use by students with manual impairments, and other similar services
and actions.
There are other references to effectiveness in the general
provisions of the Section 504 regulation which state, in part, that a recipient
may not:
Provide a qualified handicapped person with an aid, benefit, or
service that is not as effective as that provided to others; or
Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to
handicapped persons or to any class of handicapped persons unless such action
is necessary to provide qualified handicapped persons with aid, benefits, or
services that are as effective as those provided to others.
The Title II regulation contains comparable provisions.
The Section 504 regulation also states:
[A]ids,
benefits, and services, to be equally effective, are not required to produce
the identical result or level of achievement for handicapped and nonhandicapped
persons, but must afford handicapped persons equal opportunity to obtain the
same result, to gain the same benefit, or to reach the same level of
achievement, in the most integrated setting appropriate to the person's needs.
The institution must analyze the appropriateness of an aid or
service in its specific context. For example, the type of assistance needed in
a classroom by a student who is hearing-impaired may vary, depending upon
whether the format is a large lecture hall or a seminar. With the one-way
communication of a lecture, the service of a notetaker may be adequate, but in
the two-way communication of a seminar, an interpreter may be needed. College
officials also should be aware that in determining what types of auxiliary aids
and services are necessary under Title II of the ADA, the institution must give
primary consideration to the requests of individuals with disabilities.
Cost of Auxiliary Aids
Postsecondary schools receiving federal financial assistance must
provide effective auxiliary aids to students who are disabled. If an aid is
necessary for classroom or other appropriate (nonpersonal) use, the institution
must make it available, unless provision of the aid would cause undue burden. A
student with a disability may not be required to pay part or all of the costs
of that aid or service. An institution may not limit what it spends for
auxiliary aids or services or refuse to provide auxiliary aids because it
believes that other providers of these services exist, or condition its
provision of auxiliary aids on availability of funds. In many cases, an
institution may meet its obligation to provide auxiliary aids by assisting the
student in obtaining the aid or obtaining reimbursement for the cost of an aid
from an outside agency or organization, such as a state rehabilitation agency
or a private charitable organization. However, the institution remains
responsible for providing the aid.
Personal Aids and
Services
An issue that is often misunderstood by postsecondary officials
and students is the provision of personal aids and services. Personal aids and
services, including help in bathing, dressing, or other personal care, are not
required to be provided by postsecondary institutions. The Section 504 regulation
states:
Recipients
need not provide attendants, individually prescribed devices, readers for
personal use or study, or other devices or services of a personal nature.
Title II of the ADA similarly states that personal services are
not required.
In order to ensure that students with disabilities are given a
free appropriate public education, local education agencies are required to
provide many services and aids of a personal nature to students with
disabilities when they are enrolled in elementary and secondary schools.
However, once students with disabilities graduate from a high school program or
its equivalent, education institutions are no longer required to provide aids,
devices, or services of a personal nature.
Postsecondary schools do not have to provide personal services
relating to certain individual academic activities. Personal attendants and
individually prescribed devices are the responsibility of the student who has a
disability and not of the institution. For example, readers may be provided for
classroom use but institutions are not required to provide readers for personal
use or for help during individual study time.
Questions Commonly Asked
by Postsecondary Schools and Their Students
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Q:
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What are a college's obligations to provide auxiliary aids for
library study?
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A:
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Libraries and some of their significant and basic materials must
be made accessible by the recipient to students with disabilities. Students
with disabilities must have the appropriate auxiliary aids needed to locate
and obtain library resources. The college library's basic index of holdings
(whether formatted on-line or on index cards) must be accessible. For
example, a screen and keyboard (or card file) must be placed within reach of
a student using a wheelchair. If a Braille index of holdings is not available
for blind students, readers must be provided for necessary assistance.
Articles and materials that are library holdings and are
required for course work must be accessible to all students enrolled in that
course. This means that if material is required for the class, then its text
must be read for a blind student or provided in Braille or on tape. A
student's actual study time and use of these articles are considered personal
study time and the institution has no further obligation to provide
additional auxiliary aids.
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Q:
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What if an instructor
objects to the use of an auxiliary or personal aid?
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A:
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Sometimes postsecondary
instructors may not be familiar with Section 504 or ADA requirements
regarding the use of an auxiliary or personal aid in their classrooms. Most
often, questions arise when a student uses a tape recorder. College teachers
may believe recording lectures is an infringement upon their own or other
students' academic freedom, or constitutes copyright violation.
The instructor may not
forbid a student's use of an aid if that prohibition limits the student's
participation in the school program. The Section 504 regulation states:
A recipient may not impose upon
handicapped students other rules, such as the prohibition of tape recorders
in classrooms or of dog guides in campus buildings, that have the effect of
limiting the participation of handicapped students in the recipient's
education program or activity.
In order to allow a
student with a disability the use of an effective aid and, at the same time,
protect the instructor, the institution may require the student to sign an
agreement so as not to infringe on a potential copyright or to limit freedom
of speech.
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Q:
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What if students with disabilities require auxiliary aids during
an examination?
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A:
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A student may need an auxiliary aid or service in order to
successfully complete a course exam. This may mean that a student be allowed
to give oral rather than written answers. It also may be possible for a
student to present a tape containing the oral examination response. A test
should ultimately measure a student's achievements and not the extent of the
disability.
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Q:
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Can postsecondary institutions treat a foreign student with
disabilities who needs auxiliary aids differently than American students?
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A:
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No, an institution may not treat a foreign student who needs
auxiliary aids differently than an American student. A postsecondary
institution must provide to a foreign student with a disability the same type
of auxiliary aids and services it would provide to an American student with a
disability. Section 504 and the ADA require that the provision of services be
based on a student's disability and not on such other criteria as
nationality.
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Q:
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Are institutions responsible for providing auxiliary services to
disabled students in filling out financial aid and student employment applications,
or other forms of necessary paperwork?
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A:
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Yes, an institution must provide services to disabled students
who may need assistance in filling out aid applications or other forms. If
the student requesting assistance is still in the process of being evaluated
to determine eligibility for an auxiliary aid or service, help with this
paperwork by the institution is mandated in the interim.
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Q:
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Does a postsecondary institution have to provide auxiliary aids
and services for a nondegree student?
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A:
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Yes, students with disabilities who are auditing classes or who
otherwise are not working for a degree must be provided auxiliary aids and
services to the same extent as students who are in a degree-granting program.
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For More Information
For more information on Section 504 and the ADA and their
application to auxiliary aids and services for disabled students in
postsecondary schools, or to obtain additional assistance, see the list of
OCR's 12 enforcement offices containing the address and telephone number for
the office that serves your area, or call 1-800-421-3481.