Recently, one of my students requested the use of a聽personal 鈥渕emory聽aid鈥 鈥 a聽pre-written notecard 鈥 in an聽exam. According to my聽institution, the accommodation was 鈥渞equired for equal access鈥, even though a聽memory aid obviously undermined the evaluation鈥檚 major purpose: to聽test the student鈥檚 ability to聽recall class content. I聽had to聽grade her exam like everyone else鈥檚, 补蝉听颈蹿 she hadn鈥檛 used a聽memory aid. Her grade, therefore, was a聽lie.
Nor is this an isolated case. Faculty are increasingly being asked to聽provide accommodations, which also include note-taking assistance, class recordings, essay deadline extensions, extra time on聽exams and private testing locations. Many colleagues privately express disapproval, but we聽are required to聽provide them for all documented disabilities (including 鈥渕ental impairments鈥) because, ostensibly, this is聽what the requires.
Specifically, the act requires places of 鈥減ublic accommodation鈥, including post-secondary institutions, to provide 鈥渞easonable accommodations鈥 to people with disabilities unless they 鈥渃an demonstrate that making such modifications would fundamentally alter the nature of [any] goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations鈥 they provide.
One student complained to me about my evaluation of his writing. If聽he had previously studied composition, like some of his peers, he would have performed better, he said: 鈥淗ow is it fair for me to be penalised for something beyond my control?鈥 The answer is that universities should聽not strive for fairness 鈥 in this student鈥檚 sense of the word 鈥 because doing so fundamentally undermines a primary good they provide: namely, credentialing.
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In a 2017 in the Canadian newspaper National Post, Bruce Pardy, professor of law at Queen鈥檚 University, argued that accommodations such as 鈥渆xtra time for mental disabilities鈥 are 鈥渁s聽unfair to other students as a head start would be to other runners鈥 because the purpose of exams is to discriminate among students based on 鈥渉ow well they can think, learn, analyze, remember, communicate, plan, prepare, organize, focus and perform under pressure. Discrimination is聽one of聽the purposes of the exam.鈥
My student鈥檚 sense of fairness is different from Pardy鈥檚. It suggests that students should be evaluated based on how they would have performed if聽they didn鈥檛 have disabilities 鈥 which, after all, they cannot control. As the editorial board of The Queen鈥檚 Journal, a student-run newspaper at Queen鈥檚 University, : 鈥淩ather than guaranteeing a聽better grade, [accommodations] give students the chance to achieve a result that reflects what they can really do with their academic ability.鈥
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But nearly everyone agrees that there are some disabilities that should聽not 鈥 or 肠辞耻濒诲听苍辞迟 鈥 be accommodated. Examples include diseases that severely impair cognitive development, memory or ability to participate in a normal classroom environment.聽Moreover, many people without disabilities are still academically disadvantaged by other factors they cannot control. Should we accommodate those whose intelligence is negatively influenced by their genetics, for instance? Or those who were raised in poor households with few books, or who are addicted to video games, or who have headaches on exam day?
Kurt Vonnegut鈥檚 1961 short story Harrison Bergeron portrays a society so obsessed with fairness that it seeks to eliminate all聽environmental and genetic factors that affect performance. The intelligent wear 鈥渕ental handicap radios鈥 that sonically interrupt their thoughts; the beautiful are masked; the athletic are yoked with weights and imprisoned for removing them. A聽news anchor reporting an emergency has a speech impediment so severe that he cannot vocalise.
Clearly, this is ridiculous. At a certain point, we all have to accept that life is just irremediably unfair. To be generally useful, performance evaluations must provide comparative assessment of ability. This requires comparative fairness, the measuring of like against like, which is why evaluations must be conducted under the same conditions 鈥 under which some people will perform better than others because of factors they could not control.
For instance, to determine which scientist should be entrusted with important research, we need to know who performs better (and worse) than peers under real-world conditions, which include distractions, time pressure and team-working. The same goes for surgeons, lawyers, electricians, civil engineers and a whole host of other professions in which underperformance can have dire consequences for patients or clients. A university鈥檚 credentialing, involving grading, degree conferral and its own reputation, is vital for assessing relative merit.
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In operator training for planes and vehicles, even strength of eyesight is relevant, so accommodating poor eyesight by giving extra time to identify potential hazards would provide a false idea of relative ability, for instance, to fly a plane safely. In typical university disciplines, however, poor eyesight is irrelevant to real-world performance. Consequently, eyesight accommodations, such as enlarged text, are acceptable.
Another way of putting the point is that any accommodation that would advantage an arbitrary student should be avoided. Extra time in exams is an obvious example. Intellectual agility, speed of thought and execution, is generally relevant to real-world competence, so any accommodation that gives a false impression of student agility is illegitimate.
Universities that offer such accommodations, however well-intentioned, compromise their credentialing ability. They flout the assumption that grades represent like-for-like comparisons among peers. They deceptively imply that all students within a particular grade boundary can perform equally well in the real world. They falsely say that all degree holders are competent.
These are lies that we need to stop telling.
Justin Noia is a visiting assistant professor at Providence College, Rhode Island.
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