| ▲ | sureglymop 2 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Where does the idea/reasoning that highly academically successful students cannot have a disability come from? I would go a step further and say there is probably a high chance that neurodivergent students are more academically successful, iff they did get to that level of education. And it's not impossible that they are overrepresented in that group of people. And people may be intellectually gifted, and yet experience strong behavioral and social difficulties. Not that my own observation counts but I've met multiple people on the spectrum who were highly intelligent and "gifted" yet faced more adversity in life, i.e. for social reasons. It's controversial because it directly goes against the idea that we exist in a meritocracy. People are going to cheat no matter what. To me, it's more important that the people who do need and deserve accomodations are able to get them though! | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | esafak an hour ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Nobody said that. They are saying or insinuating that 38% of successful students are unlikely to be disabled. That certainly was not the case as recently as a decade or two ago. People have not changed drastically, so what gives? | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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