How does everyone feel about students with learning disabilities getting considerably extra time on each section of the MCAT? I am not taking a stance either way I am just curious.
Who gives a crap? Worry about yourself. Them getting extra time has absolutely no effect on how you're going to score.
If you're disabled yourself, then who cares what other people (other than adcoms) think?
How do you feel about disabled people getting handicap parking?
SMH
I've read that theirs an asterisk next to their score on report. So assuming that its indicated they had extra time, I would hope that adcoms would review that score differently.
Speaking from personal experience, in high school I was given extended time, and a few other advantages because I was thought to have some learning disadvantage. But I refused to believe I did. I was placed in a few remedial classes, and given extra time on exams and different tests as well (for example my file said no open ended, or must have said something similar because most of the kids in the class would get open ended tests and I would get matching). However I spoke to a few teachers, told them I do not need the extra time or special exams, and a few opted to listen to me. I also doubled up in a few classes and caught up with everyone. I proved that I didn't need the extra help and I didn't have learning disabilities . I do believe at one point I may have had some degree of learning disadvantage, because I came from a foreign country, but having lived a longer portion of my life here I think I outgrew them.
While in my some of my earlier classes, I did know some students that had real learning disabilities , I had a friend who had dyslexia, and I believe he did deserve the extended time. But by the third year in high school/fourth I believe he'd coped with his dyslexia, and manged to do everything that an average person could, without needing extra time. I think by the time people reach their 3/4th year of college and plan to take the mcat, they should have found a way to cope with their learning disability (I say this in reference to the ones that manageable). So the fact that the mcat does have option for people with learning disabilities is fair and it is reflected on their score report. I feel that if a student wishes to apply for learning disability then he/she must show some proof/documentation to the AAMC, thus limiting people who would like the dupe the system.
They always be stealin my parking space. Those sick people. Next thing you know women are going to want to the right to vote and that's a world i can't live in
Personally? I think it's utter BS. But before someone jumps on me as an insensitive *******, there are a few reasons I say so. One, as someone already mentioned, diversity in medicine means very little to a person if their doc says 'hang on; I need extra time to figure this out because I have a disability.' Two, I go to a school where students with learning disabilities can get extra help. However, the students who end up in this program at my college most often have mild ADD or some problem that doesn't actually seem to effect their test taking ability. Basically, my school is thinking of shutting the program down because it's being abused. These students get first registration, override for all prereqs, extra exam time, alternative questions, etc., but these same students are those who most frequently skip class or who only use their 'extra time' for classes like organic chemistry but not a 101 humanities course, implying they just want the extra time for harder subjects (like every normal student does). Students who actually need the help refuse to go to the program because it has such an awful reputation among students and faculty.
All that said, seeing how badly the program is abused at my own university, I don't like seeing it used on the MCAT because I can only see it being used as an 'out' or 'excuse' for a poor score by students who don't want to put in the work. Again, call it insensitive, but even if you do have a legitimate medical issue, you don't belong in a high academia world like medicine if you need special exemptions to take an exam in most cases.