Anonymous wrote:DD disclosed in GMU application and got in. However, the public high school counselor said the college would know because of some of the courses taken - basic team-taught courses - that were on her transcript. So talk to your counselor first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS with dyslexia is not interested in disclosing it in his application. He may contact the disabilities office at whatever university he attends if he thinks he needs their support, whatever their support is. I’m leaving it up to him. He was officially diagnosed when he was 6 with dyslexia but unofficially identified as dyslexic before that so he’s going to taking the reins now.
This is one of the most avoidable mistakes college students made. Dyslexics who go to college and try to wing it without supports don’t do well. Save them the semester of figuring that out on their own (and starting college with a lower gpa or even a failed class) and make sure they at least register for extra time. It’s so easy.
Anonymous wrote:My DS with dyslexia is not interested in disclosing it in his application. He may contact the disabilities office at whatever university he attends if he thinks he needs their support, whatever their support is. I’m leaving it up to him. He was officially diagnosed when he was 6 with dyslexia but unofficially identified as dyslexic before that so he’s going to taking the reins now.
Anonymous wrote:My son has speech apraxia in addition to AuDHD and did not take any foreign language. He is a NMF and used the additional info part of the common app to explain his lack of FL, his focus on cultural learning classes such as film study, and lived experience as a multiracial person in an ethnically diverse area.
He also wrote several short essays for school specific questions that disclosed his experiences as a neuro-divergent person and how that shaped and influenced his perspectives on empathy, diversity, and justice.
He was accepted to several great schools including Case Western, Purdue Honors, Penn State Honors, VT, GMU, JMU, South Carolina, Tulsa, TCU, etc. Many of the private/OOS offered substantial merit awards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS with dyslexia is not interested in disclosing it in his application. He may contact the disabilities office at whatever university he attends if he thinks he needs their support, whatever their support is. I’m leaving it up to him. He was officially diagnosed when he was 6 with dyslexia but unofficially identified as dyslexic before that so he’s going to taking the reins now.
This is one of the most avoidable mistakes college students made. Dyslexics who go to college and try to wing it without supports don’t do well. Save them the semester of figuring that out on their own (and starting college with a lower gpa or even a failed class) and make sure they at least register for extra time. It’s so easy.
Anonymous wrote:My DS with dyslexia is not interested in disclosing it in his application. He may contact the disabilities office at whatever university he attends if he thinks he needs their support, whatever their support is. I’m leaving it up to him. He was officially diagnosed when he was 6 with dyslexia but unofficially identified as dyslexic before that so he’s going to taking the reins now.
Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a kid with an assortment of learning/other disabilities we thought about this a lot.
What I have consistently heard is if it is going to be self-evident in your materials (eg you had a resource class) there is no reason not to disclose if it might explain something further.
Our DD did not write about her main disabilities in her essay, but she did write about something that is quirky about her that is probably related to one of her other disabilities (she has a limited ability to feel hot and cold) and how it has influenced her approach to the world. It allowed her to write something unique, compelling, and personal that showed growth and self-reflection, without veering too far into territory she didn’t want to overly dwell on.
She used the additional information section to tackle academic “stuff” that was weird. Like she had concluded her study of foreign language after sophomore year due to a hearing disability because the school did not offer a non-auditory language option. She was applying to some schools where they would have expected her to take foreign language each year of HS.
I think our opinion has consistently been that if the school doesn’t want a kid like our DD (eg a kid with a hearing disability that prohibits her study of spoken foreign language) that is clearly not the right school for her. At that point there is nothing to lose on being transparent within reason.
Anonymous wrote:Trying to claim a disability to explain why you got a B+ in math just puts a bad taste in my mouth, and likely others as well.