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Requesting & Processing Accommodation Requests
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The applicant should go to the nearest GED Testing Center for the
correct form and some assistance. If you are an advocate for the
applicant, you may need to go along depending upon the students
capacity for independent action and self-advocacy.
Alternatively, forms are available in this web site under the obvious
title, "forms."
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Be sure that assessments by licensed diagnosticians have occurred
recently since some "older" assessments of disabilities
or conditions may be viewed as being too old to be currently valid.
Each form will tell you how "old" the diagnosis may be
to be allowable.
A diagnosis by a qualified professional
such as a psychologist, psychiatrist, medical doctor, learning disability
specialist, or other professional must be done and proprerly recorded
on the correct form for the request to be considered. In most cases,
accompanying the form must be a letter from the licensed
diagnostician / doctor.
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Be sure that licensed diagnosticians "talk to us" as
they fill out the forms. Such "talk" should explain how
the disability interferes with learning and testing AND what reasonable
accommodations should be requested for the examinee.
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Make no assumptions. We won't.
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Return the completed forms to the local GED testing
center or if you plucked the forms off of this web site, mail them
directly to Murray Meszaros (me) -- mailing address is on the home
page, right below the blue graphics and words. Don't forget the
box number or your forms go to Latvia, New Zealand or Kenya.
Testing center staff should examine the forms for 100% completion,
etc.and then forward the forms to the state office for adjudication."
What is the turn-around time?
From the time the documentation leaves the local test center and the
forms are reviewed at the state level, two weeks will pass. Without
your submitting fully completed forms with necessary supporting documentation,
approval by the state office could linger into decades (that's a joke,
but it does illustrate a point).
Do accommodations make the test easier?
No. Accommodations simply level the playing field much like self accommodations
such as eye glasses help you do your best, but do not "make you
smarter.". Accommodations allow persons with disabilities
to demonstrate what they know in a different, fair-to-all method.
What GED test accommodations need to be approved by
the state office?
- Extended time
- Frequent, supervised breaks
- Private room
- Large print with extended time
- Audiocassette version
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- Calculator, talking calculator (for Part
Two of the Math
test)
- Braille version -- Use of a brailler
- Deaf Interpreter for test instructions
- Printed instructions
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What accommodations can be provided automatically (i.e.
that do not require prior state office or local test site approval)?
- Wearing hats with brims to minimize the effects of fluorescent
lighting
- Priority seating to avoid distractions
- Large print test forms with normal time limit
- Earplugs -- hearing protectors
- Glasses with tinted lens, goggles, a magnifying glass
- Allergy/dust masks or other chemical sensitivity masks
- Gloves
- Straight-edge without any markings
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- One test per day
- Colored transparency overlays
- Clear overlays with colored highlighter
- Post-it notes to mark spatial direction
- Adaptive devices, such as pencil
holders, muscle, skeletal
aids such
as wrist braces, etc. that the
candidate provides
- Organizers/learning strategies written
on scratch paper
from memory
- Other similar aids that are
compensatory, and which do
not
give an advantage to the test taker
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NOTE: The chief examiner WILL EXAMINE he aids for security purposes.
What test accommodations are NOT permitted?
- Test reader
- Computer testing / spell-checker (except in certain situations
for particular disabilities)
- Rulers, weigh scales
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GED page require the
free Adobe Acrobat Reader

 This
site brought to you through the partnership of Utah State Office of
Education
(USOE), Utah Education Network
(UEN) and Utah System of Higher Education
(USHE). Send questions or comments
regarding this site to
murray [dot] meszaros
[at]
schools [dot] utah [dot] gov
(Murray Meszaros)
.
This page last updated
September 11, 2008
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