AMERICA'S colleges and universities are grappling with an unprecedented revelation: roughly four in ten students have been quietly suffering from disabilities this entire time, conditions that apparently lay dormant until the precise moment a difficult exam was scheduled.
"We're seeing a historic awakening," said Stanford Director of Accessibility Services Dr. Miranda Flexner, whose office has processed more accommodation requests this year than during the entire first decade of the Americans with Disabilities Act. "Students are finally finding the courage to disclose conditions they've heroically hidden for years—sometimes as many as three weeks since their last accommodation expired."
Registered Disabled
Accommodation Rate
With Accommodations
2011-12
The surge has drawn attention from critics and advocates alike, with the former arguing that students may be gaming the system and the latter insisting that even suggesting such a thing constitutes a hate crime against people who sometimes feel tired.
Do You Qualify For Accommodations?
Answer these medically rigorous questions to determine your eligibility
"The numbers don't lie," said Derek Thompson, author of the recent bestseller Abundance, calling the statistics "mind-boggling." "It simply does not make any sense to have a policy that declares half of the students at Stanford cognitively disabled and in need of accommodations."
Thompson's comments drew immediate backlash from disability advocates, who noted that questioning accommodation rates is itself a form of ableism, and that the only appropriate response to any disability-related statistic is to nod solemnly and ask how one might help.
Venture capitalist Joe Lonsdale, co-founder of Palantir, offered a more direct assessment, suggesting some families are seeking diagnoses purely to give students "a leg up" in competitive academic environments—an observation that disability rights groups characterized as "violence" and "erasure."
Spin The Diagnosis Wheel
Discover which condition is holding you back from your true potential
The debate has exposed a fundamental tension in American higher education: the system simultaneously incentivizes students to claim disability status while making it socially unacceptable to question whether any particular claim is legitimate.
Faculty Navigate Impossible Terrain
For instructors, the surge in accommodations has created a pedagogical minefield. Many report wanting to support students with legitimate needs but fearing that any skepticism—even silent, internal skepticism—could end their careers.
"I had an increasingly large number of students be given the accommodation to turn work in 48 hours late, and I got tired of constantly having to extend due dates for just them. The students I've had on this accommodation would use it pretty much every week since they were perpetually behind." — Anonymous Adjunct Professor, Reddit
The professor, who noted they themselves have ADHD and autism, was immediately accused of "lateral ableism" by commenters who questioned whether their own diagnoses were legitimate.
Acceptable Faculty Response Generator
Generate a pre-approved response to accommodation requests that won't get you fired
Harry Lewis, former dean of Harvard College, suggested the system may have outgrown its original purpose. "The whole system of accommodations for things other than physical disabilities just seems badly mismatched with the educational purposes that students and faculty share," he told the Harvard Crimson.
Lewis was immediately placed on administrative leave pending a review of his comments. (Editor's note: This did not actually happen, but it felt true enough to include.)
The Great Accommodation Inflation
Click each year to see what changed
Katy Washington, CEO of the Association of Higher Education and Disability, pushed back against critics, arguing that students seeking accommodations are not "unfair burdens" on professors.
"For decades, students with invisible disabilities were denied support because their struggles were dismissed as laziness or lack of effort," Washington wrote. "The rise in accommodations reflects a cultural shift toward acknowledging mental health, not a decline in academic integrity."
The statement did not address how one might distinguish between a genuine invisible disability and regular human laziness, which critics note is also invisible and also involves struggling.
Telehealth consultations available. All major insurance accepted.
Ableism Detection Meter
Move the slider to see how ableist your thoughts are
The Job Market Doesn't Care About Your Feelings
Perhaps the most uncomfortable aspect of the accommodation surge is what happens after graduation. While colleges have expanded flexibility for students with various conditions, employers have shown considerably less enthusiasm for the concept of "extra time."
Less than half of U.S. professionals at the director-level and above say a university degree is essential for getting ahead, according to LinkedIn. Companies increasingly evaluate candidates on what they can actually do—through portfolios, projects, and real-world problem-solving.
"The workplace doesn't come with extended deadlines," noted one HR director who requested anonymity to avoid being canceled. "If you can't perform under normal conditions, that's... that's just called not being able to do the job."
Workplace Reality Simulator
See how your college accommodations translate to employment
Sen. Mark Warner has warned that joblessness among recent graduates could hit 25% in the next two to three years as AI reshapes entry-level work—a development that will likely affect accommodated and non-accommodated students equally, which critics note is a form of equality nobody asked for.
Post-Graduation Reality Calculator
Calculate how your accommodations prepare you for the job market
The Uncomfortable Middle Ground
Lost in the debate is a nuanced reality that neither side seems willing to acknowledge: some students genuinely benefit from accommodations, some are gaming the system, and there's no reliable way to tell the difference without appearing monstrous.
"The whole premise of invisible disabilities is that they're invisible," explained Dr. Raymond Spectacle, a psychologist who has evaluated thousands of students for accommodations. "So by definition, we have to take people at their word. Which works great until people figure out that we have to take them at their word."
Accommodation Discourse Bingo
Click the squares as you encounter each phrase in the wild
The accommodation-industrial complex has spawned an entire ecosystem of private evaluators, telehealth diagnosis mills, and "accommodation consultants" who help families navigate the process—for a fee, of course.
"We prefer the term 'advocacy services,'" said Jennifer Goldstein, founder of AccommodationPath, which charges $2,500 to help students "discover their learning differences." "We're not helping anyone fake anything. We're helping students understand that the struggles they've always experienced have names—names that happen to be listed in the DSM-5."
Billionaire Hot Take Generator
Generate venture capitalist opinions on disability accommodations
Whether the current trajectory is sustainable remains unclear. At the current rate of increase, 100% of college students will be registered disabled by 2034, at which point accommodations will simply become "how school works" and the concept will lose all meaning.
Until then, the debate will continue, with both sides talking past each other in increasingly creative ways—one side insisting that any questioning is bigotry, the other side insisting that statistics don't lie (except when they do), and the students themselves quietly filing paperwork that entitles them to 1.5x time on an exam that probably doesn't matter anyway.
Reader Poll
Where do you stand on the accommodation debate?
At press time, the author of this article was unavailable for comment, having submitted a request for extended deadline accommodations due to newly diagnosed satirical processing disorder.