Documentation Guidelines
The Office of Accessible Education recognizes the impact that complex, multi-layered and identity-related factors may have on a student’s ability to secure documentation and substantiate their qualification as an individual with disability.
Students may come to our office from backgrounds that include distrust of the medical establishment, experiences of medical racism, familial or cultural stigma that prevents them from seeking treatment. First-generation and/or low-income students, those coming to Stanford from under-resourced public schools, and those for whom English was not the primary language used at home may not have been introduced to their rights to services and support before coming to Stanford.
Beyond this, the consequences of systems of oppression, such as racial trauma, may produce physical and psychological symptoms that are disabling for students. These impacts may then be even further exacerbated by repeated exposure to macro- and micro-aggressions. This, coupled with fear of not being believed, may delay students seeking mental and medical care and thus obtaining documentation.
Documentation is not required to meet with us. To request a meeting with a Disability Adviser without medical documentation, email oae-contactus@stanford.edu.
Documentation Guidelines for Academic Accommodations
Stanford students requesting academic accommodations in order to ameliorate barriers in the postsecondary educational environment must submit documentation concerning their disability. Documentation is evaluated by professional staff and used to both verify disability and complement self-report of lived experience while determining appropriate academic accommodations. All student cases are assessed individually.
Students who have readily observable disabilities (e.g., those using a wheelchair, white cane, or in a cast or sling) may not need to submit documentation.
Those whose disabilities are diagnosable only through extensive psychoeducational testing (e.g., learning disorders) may be made eligible for accommodations while at Stanford despite their documentation being out of a typical range of recency. In these cases, students should work with their disability advisers directly to discuss updating documentation for the purposes of qualifying for accommodations on high stakes testing such as graduate entry or licensure exams. Each institution and testing agency maintains its own documentation guidelines and requirements.
Professionals who can provide documentation
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Professionals preparing and providing documentation must have comprehensive training and experience in the relevant specialty and hold appropriate licensure and/or certification.
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Documentation from a family member or someone with a personal relationship with the student (although they may be qualified by training and licensure) will not be accepted.
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Documentation must be in English, typed on official letterhead with the title and credentials (including licensure information) of the professional writing the report, dated, and signed.
Requested contents of documentation
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Summary of the professional relationship to the student, including duration of time providing care, identification of assessment instruments, testing procedures, or other methods of evaluation.
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Current disability, including diagnosis and diagnostic code(s).
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Relevant medical, developmental, cognitive, and/or psychosocial history.
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Severity of the condition and, if applicable, prognosis or expected duration of disability.
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Information regarding treatment plan, necessary elements of daily living, disability management, medication and possible side-effects.
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Description of the current functional limitations experienced as a result of the condition. This should address the student’s disability experience in such a way that adequately illustrates substantial limitations on one or more life activities in an academic setting.
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Recommended accommodations and rationale that directly ties the accommodation(s) need to the functional limitations of the disability.
Documentation Guidelines for Housing Accommodations
Documentation from students with disabilities requesting accommodations in Stanford University student housing must demonstrate the functional impact of their disability on major life activities (e.g., walking, seeing, hearing, learning, self-care, etc.) and provide current evidence to support the requested disability-related accommodation(s).
Students who have disabilities which are not subject to change over time do not have to provide new documentation of the same disability year after year. If, however, there is a new diagnosis, or a new functional impact of a previously documented disability, then new documentation may be requested. Students who have readily observable disabilities (e.g., use of a mobility device, white cane, or hearing aids) may not need to submit documentation. Instead, we ask that you indicate this on your OAE registration form.
Professionals who can provide documentation
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Professionals preparing and providing documentation must have comprehensive training and experience in the relevant specialty and hold appropriate licensure and/or certification.
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The provider preparing the documentation should have an established professional care relationship with the resident, and a familiarity with their case beyond assessment for the sole purpose of making an accommodation recommendation.
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Documentation from a family member or someone with a personal relationship with the student (although they may be qualified by training and licensure) will not be accepted.
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Documentation must be in English, typed on official letterhead with the title and credentials (including licensure information) of the professional writing the report, dated, and signed.
Required contents of documentation
1. Brief summary of the professional relationship to the student, including duration of time providing care and any relevant treatment information.
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Verification of disability or medical condition through either:
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Diagnosis, including diagnostic codes, if applicable; and/or
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A description of the functional limitations experienced as a result of the condition. This should address the student’s disability experience in such a way that adequately illustrates substantial limitations on one or more life activities. Information regarding severity of the disorder, medication and side effects, prescribed treatment plan information is helpful. Documentation that both names the condition and describes the student’s disability experience is best.
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Recommended accommodations and rationale that directly tie the accommodation to the student’s disability. In some cases, the relationship between the disability and the accommodation is straightforward; in some cases, it is not. If your patient’s case is the latter, please explain how your recommendation is necessary to mitigate the student’s functional limitations in the residential postsecondary education environment. This may include an explanation of potential consequences if the accommodation were not provided or possible alternative accommodations, as specific requests may not be available or supported by the OAE but will help significantly in the determination of appropriate accommodations.