Advocate: College admissions scandal will set back progress for students who use accommodations

The 2019 college admissions scandal has reinforced feelings of unfairness towards accommodations received by students with learning disabilities, and is likely to make it more difficult for students to receive the help they need, according to a member of the board of the Learning Disability Association of New York.

As a learning disability activist, Kathryn Cappella, who sits on the board, emphasized the decades-old debate about the fairness of modifications for those who need them, and how the scandal only added to the negative views about people with disabilities and the modifications they receive. The recent scandal did not introduce the complexity surrounding testing accommodations.

Celebrities including Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman are ensnared in an admissions scandal that saw some students admitted to elite universities by lying about disabilities–among other infractions–to get extra time on the SAT and other college admissions tests, according to reports in The New York Times.

Students who have diagnosed neurological conditions often receive academic accommodations such as extended time on tests, a private testing room, or other changes based on the individual needs for each student. Twenty percent of children in the United States have one of these neurological conditions, which include dylexia, dysgraphia and ADHD, according to the National Center for Learning Disabilities.

Since news of the college scandal broke in Spring 2019, College Board, which administers the SAT, has emphasized its policies for students with accommodations, which some have seen as more restrictive and potentially exclusionary.

In an email from College Board to this reporter who inquired about the re-emphasis on accommodations policies, a link to a page explaining how to get accommodations was included. On this page, it explains that students need to complete a Student Eligibility Form and send in an official diagnosis of a learning disability. In some cases, a student may need a school verification.

Its website reads: “We want to know what the student’s disability is, how it is impacting them, and why they need the specific accommodation that they are requesting.”

“School verifications occur when a student receives and uses the accommodation for at least four school months,” according to the College Board’s website.

Many students, however, are not diagnosed with the learning disability until after that date has passed.

For people who require accommodations, they are a necessary part of their success on tests like the SAT. Some feel that people without disabilities don’t understand how tough it is for those diagnosed with an issue to complete tests without them.

Trent Powell, 17, of Bethesda, Maryland, receives accommodations for both ADHD and anxiety.

“The only reason why there’s extra time is because we have those obstacles to go over,” Powell said. “If I took the SAT without my extended time, I would have only gotten like five questions out of the 15 math questions.”

For students without disabilities, testing accommodations are seen as an unfair advantage.

In a 2008 study called “Perceptions of People with Disabilities: When is Accommodation Fair?” by Ramona L. Paetzold, students’ reactions to a dyslexic competitor receiving accommodations were in relation to the outcome of the contest. In other words, if receiving extra time won the competition after being given modifications, would the other competitors find that fair?

The results of the test proved the answer to be no. Despite believing the confederate had a disorder that would put her at a major disadvantage under normal conditions, students found it unfair to adjust these conditions. They believe that adjusting a test to fit an individual’s needs gives students with who need accommodations unearned benefits.

Maria Gramajo, 20, of San Rafael, California, though not believing this herself, understands how these people may feel. She recognizes the outward appearance of accommodations being advantages, but is quick to respond with a viewpoint similar to Powell’s.

Accommodations are “meant to create an equal playing field, not to put anyone in any sort of advantage,” Gramajo said.

Students with disabilities who qualify for academic accommodations say it provides equity. (Infographic by Gillian Blum)

This debate closely resembles the famous distinction between equity and equality. The image above helps to explain this distinction: Child A, a child with two hands, and Child B, a child with just one, have four cookies.

Equality is giving both children two cookies. At first glance, this option seems fair. Both children get the same number of cookies. However, since Child B only has one hand, she can only hold one cookie. In the end, Child A has an advantage since she can hold both of her cookies. Equity, however, would be giving both children two cookies, but also giving Child B a basket to hold her cookies. By giving Child B a basket, she and Child A both have the same number of cookies.

Paetzold’s study shows that most “Child As” would prefer equality, since it gives them exactly what they need, and is equal to everyone. Powell and Gramajo, on the other hand, find equity a better solution for these students – everyone gets what they need.

This debate is both ongoing, and ever-evolving. As Cappella emphasized, the 2019 scandal did not change society’s treatment of students with learning disabilities, but added to the pre-existing unfair view of accommodations held by many.

Popular mobile apps raise privacy concerns

The virtual map utilized for gathering collectibles in the mobile app Harry Potter: Wizards Unite. Mobile apps utilizing location trackers have privacy issues, experts say. (Screen shot by Gillian Blum)

With the release Friday of the mobile game Harry Potter: Wizards Unite, people are debating the safety and effectiveness of the app’s location-tracking feature and its necessity when playing the game.

Harry Potter: Wizards Unite released in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand on Friday is a mobile game based on the popular franchise of the Wizarding World. Following the same formula as Pokémon Go, also developed by Harry Potter: Wizards Unite developer, Niantic, the app uses tracking technology to follow players’ geographic locations and guides them to various virtual collectibles and challenges within their area.

The game is compelling to many, especially fans of the original franchise, however critics are concerned about privacy.

Bill Frick, a shopper in a Tenleytown CVS, commented on the game’s potential for major technological achievement, but how he sees the danger of an app tracking players’ constant location.

“You want to know if someone’s tracking your whereabouts, and where that information goes,” Frick said.

Critics of apps that require geographic location agree that it is concerning to have someone constantly following players’ locations for the sake of finding virtual wizarding artifacts. They question their own safety as players, knowing that downloading the app gives developers this private information legally and for free.

“I don’t like the fact that someone could know where I was at any given moment,” said Rachel Margolis. “I think that’s kinda creepy.”

Margolis continued to share her fear and concern for where her personal information would be going if she used the app, further emphasizing the privacy risk embedded into the standard game-play of Harry Potter: Wizards Unite.

“The most concerning privacy issue with this app is the constant tracking of location data,” wrote Tiffany Li in her 2016 article “Pokémon Go and The Law: Privacy, Intellectual Property, and Other Legal Concerns

“Most players leave the app open at all times, waiting for that sweet, sweet buzz of a new wild Pokémon appearing. This means that, effectively, you give permission for Niantic to track your movements all day, every day, wherever you go,” Li continued.

Li emphasized that not only can Niantic track players’ location, but also has little-to-no communication about where this information goes, only furthering privacy concerns among players.

Harry Potter: Wizards Unite treats these features almost identically to the preceding app.

However, many argue that using players’ geographic location enhances these games, and allows for them to conquer a major challenge facing humanity in the 21st century: getting people to go outside and play, rather than sitting at home on their phones.

In order to gather the collectibles, among other rarer game features, players need to walk around outside, and stop for a few moments at various checkpoints.

Terumi Rafferty-Osaki, who was wearing a Pokémon Go T-shirt in Tenleytown, agreed the app gets people outside, and he sees even more benefits than just getting people out and into the world.

“If people are doing it for more than the game, and looking at, kinda, like, the points of interest within the game, they’re going to actually learn a lot about (the) city and I think that that’s really awesome,” Rafferty-Osaki said.

Without the geographic location tracker, players would not have the incentive to walk around and explore their towns and cities, instead of sitting on their couch in their pajamas.

In fact, Harry Potter: Wizards Unite not only encourages walking, exploring and traveling, but actually requires players to walk around to make progress in the game through it’s use of a speed tracking software.

If a player is going faster than a typical pedestrian could physically walk or run, the game’s features stop working as well as they typically do, encouraging players to walk and run instead of taking on the passenger seat in an Uber, circling areas filled with checkpoints.

General practitioner Margaret McCartney, in her 2016 BMJ article about the risks and benefits of Harry Potter: Wizards Unite’s predecessor, Pokémon Go, wrote, “most health apps that promote physical activity tend to get users who want to be healthy. Pokémon Go isn’t marketed as a health app, but players still end up doing a lot of walking.”

She emphasized that the game has decreased national obesity, heart attacks suffered and vitamin D deficiency, due to the 2016 app’s need of physical activity.

Overall, despite privacy concerns, people are enjoying the app.

With a current 4.6/5 star rating on the app store, both due to its implementing of popular app developments from Pokémon Go, and its connection to a vast and well-known franchise, it has received positive reviews.

Harry Potter: Wizards Unite “feeds my ever needy hunger for wizard lore and fantasy,” as stated in an app review by a reviewer with the screen name Htdman. However, the game is still brand new. After the initial rush of excitement passes, more and more players may begin to recognize the danger of a geographic tracker, and could hang up their robes and wands for good.

The Office coming off Netflix in 2021

With the recent announcement that “The Office” will be leaving Netflix in 2021, mutual agreement about the extent of power streaming services have has sparked among users.

The Office” is a popular sitcom, lasting nine seasons on NBC from 2005-2013, and, in addition to its successful run, is one of Netflix’s most-watched shows. On Tuesday, Netflix announced it will be removing the show from their media-base, since NBC will be taking over all streaming of the sitcom.

“We’re sad that NBC has decided to take The Office back for its own streaming platform — but members can binge watch the show to their hearts’ content ad-free on Netflix until January 2021,” Netflix tweeted on Tuesday afternoon.

Given the show’s popularity, this announcement has caused people to notice the extent of power that streaming services, like Netflix, truly have.

Ali Feder, 17, of Westport, Connnecticut, is a fan of “The Office,” and is dissapointed to see it leave. She herself was too young to watch the show during its original run, and became a fan by binge-watching it on Netflix.

The show is “able to reach out to a different variety of people who maybe weren’t as ‘of age’ to watch it when it was airing on TV, which kind of broadens the spectrum of the fan base” said Feder. With the show likely to become less-accessible, and more costly to watch when it transfers to NBC’s official website, Feder is concerned that future generations will not be able to connect to a show that is so popular today.

“There’s also such a sense of community that you make new friends because of a show that you binged,” says Anabella DebJesus of Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Both Feder and DebJesus agree that without easy access to popular TV shows, the fan-communities build around them will dissolve.

These fan-communities make up a huge part of 21st century culture, with friends being made across the globe through bonding over a funny post appearing on both users’ feeds.

In his essay, “The Future of Fandom,” Henry Jenkins wrote about how “Newsweek reduces the phenomenon of “social media” or “web 2.0” to the phrase, ‘it’s not an audience, it’s a community.'”

In the opinion of many fans, like Feder and DebJesus, Netflix’s removal of “The Office” from their media library deprives past, present, and future fans from reaping the benefits of a close community surrounding the mutual love of a little office in Scranton, Pennsylvania.