Key principles in modifying assessment
Modifications should:
1. Be negotiated by the student and
academic staff
Some universities have Faculty or Academic
Liaison Officers who are the chief point of contact with the student.
(see p.00). Disability Officers can also assist and will ensure the
student's point of view is heard.
In the same way that assessment can be
structured differently, learning by students with a disability can also
be measured in a variety of ways, and all staff are encouraged to consider
alternatives in the light of whatever assessment practices currently
exist within their own courses.
2. Consider the individual student's
needs
Questions that may need to be answered
are:
- What is the nature of the disability?
- If recent, what was the student's experience
before onset of the disability?
- In what way is the student's functioning
limited by the disability?
- How can these limitations be eliminated
or minimised?
- What specific equipment or personnel
assistance generally is used by the student to facilitate study and
minimise disadvantage resulting from the disability?
- What adjustments are reasonable in
relation to the validity, reliability and practicality of alternative
assessment strategies?
- What adjustments are fair in relation
to maintaining the integrity of academic standards?
Every effort must be made to respect the
student's dignity and privacy while considering these issues. The student
with the disability is the 'expert' about their disability and how it
affects them in a learning situation.
3. Maintain the integrity of academic
standards
While the student's preference for a particular
adjustment should be considered, a suitable alternative may be negotiated.
Examples of alternative assessment strategies
have been trialled by universities throughout Australia and overseas.
They have been included under specific disabilities in ‘Adjustments
for Students with Disabilities' in part C.
What if the student fails the alternative
assessment?
It is possible that despite adjustments
being made, the student with a disability may not pass an examination
or assignment. Like any other student, this student may not have mastered
the course material to the necessary standard, and this would mean that
a fail grade was appropriate.
The search for best practice is ongoing.