The Americans With Disabilities Act requires schools to make accommodations for students whose disabilities require extra time for completing exams. Apparently such disabilities are common among law students: over a third of law students at Pepperdine require extra time, according to this article:
How Cheating Spreads at Law Schools. Noah Werksman asked why so many peers got extra time on tests. Pepperdine accused him of bullying. By Jillian Lederman
"Law schools don’t disclose their rates of accommodations, but a 2023 Oregon Law Review paper reports data on public law schools obtained through state public-records laws. As of 2021—before the post-Covid rise in disability accommodations—the accommodations rates were 21.3% at the University of California, Hastings (now UC Law San Francisco) and 25.5% at UC Irvine. Private law schools like Pepperdine aren’t subject to public-records laws.
The Law School Admissions Council reports that only 12% of first-year law students nationwide said they had a mental or physical disability in 2023, suggesting that many students who don’t need accommodations are using them to get a leg up. The California Bar Exam’s accommodations rate, by contrast, is around 7%.
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"students at the school told me it’s common knowledge that the accommodations system is easy to manipulate.
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"That has consequences. Law students are assessed on a highly competitive curve. Not only do grades determine job prospects, but at many law schools students receive conditional scholarships that can be reduced or revoked if their grade point averages fall in the bottom 20%, or even the lower half, of the class. Pepperdine students say many of their classmates who ranked near the top of the class, made it onto the law review, and secured competitive jobs at major law firms received extended time on tests. The university denied that students with disabilities are disproportionately represented in these groups."
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Of course, needing extra time may not be a disadvantage in a profession that bills by the hour.