Anonymous wrote:Do kids on the autism spectrum fully (or even partially) disclose their autism in their college applications?
I have been curious about this as my kids' classmates truly do span the full spectrum. I imagine some could "pass" as neurotypical, some might need some modifications, and a couple won't go. I'm not trying to be rude.
Anonymous wrote:My child is autistic and we are thinking about this now. The general advice seems to be to disclose if it explains grades in a meaningful, helpful way (ie, got Cs freshman year, then got diagnosed with proper accommodations, and got As after that) or if the applicant wants to talk substantively about what autism means to them as an identity.
But that has nothing to do with the ability to get accommodations, which is done by a different office after getting admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not disclose
Right. Because it’s so much better to get into a higher ranked college than one which can actually accommodate needs.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of times they can see it on your transcript anyway. But different people make different choices. The SALT center at Arizona has a completely separate application from the University because many people don’t want to disclose.
What could a student possibly have legally on their transcript, unless it's a kid coming from a certificate program applying to a postsecondary certificate program, that would disclose autism?
Well, if you’re applying to a school like Arizona with a well-known support program, with four years of a support course on your transcript (or whatever your school system calls it), and four years of PLTW engineering, and AP math and science courses but general English and history, and your ECs are robotics, chess, and D&D, I’m not saying the AO can make a legal diagnosis but they’re not idiots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of times they can see it on your transcript anyway. But different people make different choices. The SALT center at Arizona has a completely separate application from the University because many people don’t want to disclose.
What could a student possibly have legally on their transcript, unless it's a kid coming from a certificate program applying to a postsecondary certificate program, that would disclose autism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not disclose
Right. Because it’s so much better to get into a higher ranked college than one which can actually accommodate needs.![]()
Anonymous wrote:A lot of times they can see it on your transcript anyway. But different people make different choices. The SALT center at Arizona has a completely separate application from the University because many people don’t want to disclose.
Anonymous wrote:Do not disclose