Remote learning a lifeline for some
College students with disabilities buoyed by option
When Daniel Goldberg took his final exams in December, he was attired in little more than a babyblue hospital gown with an intravenous line snaking out of his arm.
Over the past year, Goldberg, a 24-year-old law student at Arizona State University, has toggled between attending classes and consulting with his doctors — sometimes from his hospital bed.
Before the pandemic, Goldberg, who has a painful, chronic inflammatory bowel disease, missed classes whenever he needed medical attention. But over the past academic year, he did not miss a single class, and he said he had become a better student as a result.
“It’s helped me realize, like, ‘Wait, why can’t I get these accommodations all the time?’ ” he said. “I should be able to attend via Zoom if I need to.”
Goldberg, whose condition also leaves him immunocompromised and more vulnerable to the coronavirus, asked for online accommodations as classes return in person this fall — a request the university recently granted.
Although many college students have struggled with remote learning over the last year, some with disabilities found it to be a lifeline. As the fall semester approaches, those students are pushing for remote accommodations to continue, even as in-person classes resume.
Long before the pandemic, many students with disabilities had been calling for such accommodations, often to little avail. The past year, however, has made remote instruction
seem more feasible. While some colleges have resisted remote learning as an accommodation, others say they are considering it.
“The argument in the past, pre-COVID, was, ‘Of course, an online course is fundamentally different than a course in the classroom,’ ” said Arlene Kanter, an expert in disability law at the Syracuse University College of Law. “Well, COVID changed all that.”
Colleges and universities are generally required to provide “reasonable” accommodations or modifications for qualified students with disabilities — as long as those changes do not “fundamentally alter” the nature of the program or pose other undue burdens for the institutions.
Those terms have always been open to interpretation
and debate. But because many colleges did not offer discounts on tuition for remote learning last year, they could have a harder time arguing that it is different from, or inferior to, in-person instruction.
“It becomes maybe a little tricky for school officials to then later claim that going online would be a serious degradation of the educational environment,” said Adam M. Samaha, an expert in constitutional and disability law at New York University’s School of Law. “If that is good-enough education, then a student might claim, ‘Why not extend the same principle to a person who has physical difficulty commuting to the classroom?’ ”
Cameron Lynch believes colleges were not built with students like her in
mind. To get to class at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, Lynch, a sophomore with muscular dystrophy, said she had to navigate uneven brick walkways. And some of the campus’s old buildings lack accessibility features like elevators or ramps.
“Walking to class is always kind of difficult, regardless of COVID, so it’s nice to be online,” Lynch said.
Lynch, who also has celiac disease and diabetes, is immunocompromised. And even though she is vaccinated, she is fearful of getting the coronavirus.
Last year, when her college started offering classes in person again, she discovered that some of the classes she needed to take for her double major in sociology and government were no longer being
offered online. She brought her concerns to the college’s disability services office. It declined to allow her to attend her required classes remotely.
Suzanne Clavet, a spokeswoman for William & Mary, declined to comment on Lynch’s case and said the college considered online learning as a possible accommodation on a case-by-case basis. In an email, she said, “In some instances, remote courses are not possible if this would result in a fundamental alteration of the course.”
Students don’t have much recourse.
“I can’t sue because it’s too expensive, and I didn’t want to cause any problems in my school,” Lynch said.
Even just knowing that online classes are an option can help students with disabilities by assuring them that there is a safety net.
But online classes are not a panacea, as Cory Lewis, a biology major at Georgia Military College, discovered last year. Lewis has sickle cell disease, which can cause fatigue, chronic pain and organ damage, and leaves him vulnerable to infectious diseases.
If it had been a normal academic year, he might have had to withdraw from classes, he said. Instead, he was able to stay enrolled.
But after struggling to focus in his other remote classes, Lewis plans to return to in-person learning this fall, even though he worries about his health.
“I just learn a lot better when I’m actually in front of the teacher,” said Lewis, who’s vaccinated but said some classmates were not.