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Old Jan 30, 2012, 10:01 AM
Silent_tsol's Avatar
Silent_tsol Silent_tsol is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2011
Location: Canada
Posts: 895
After having a bit of a break down last year, I finally agreed with the school counsellor to send out an accommodation letter just in case. But the problem I'm having now is, she told me I need to speak to each prof to confirm they got it and just a brief "I don't expect to need them but I will email you in advance if I do".

The thought of doing this is too much. They have it already -i can't! I think in a sense that's what makes this all real to me. But I made it through high school and 3/4 of college without this (I had anxiety problems all along just didn't recognize what it was). At this point in my program I'm in a very small class. I dread the idea of making this real and using it to say, write an exam in another room. I can't just sneak out, everyone would ask why I "didn't write".

Ahh the idea of talking to profs about this is making me panic. I can handle emailing them if I need to use an accommodation I think but I hate talking face to face and
I don't know how to do this!

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  #2  
Old Jan 30, 2012, 12:23 PM
hoping4best hoping4best is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2009
Posts: 582
Can someone else talk to them on your behalf?
  #3  
Old Jan 30, 2012, 12:56 PM
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doggiedo doggiedo is offline
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Member Since: Jan 2012
Location: Northeast US
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I work with college students who have accomodations and as a teacher/faculty, I would do almost anything (within my capabilities) to help a student who needs accomodations. I actually had them when I was a student, even in college.

Most of the time, the professors are used to working with students are very helpful. Many times you don't even have to show up to the class - you can set up a time/day to take the exam in the tutoring center or the instructor's office that same day.

Students don't really notice that you aren't there. Most of the time, they are so focused on doing well and studying for themselves that they probably don't even ask why you did it. You can just say, "I worked with the instructor and took the exam". Or, "I'm all set" or even, turn the question around to say "how do you think you did"?

I like Hoping's idea to see if you can get an advocate. Many student disability centers have people who can coach you through this - is this something you can look into where you are? Email is fine, too - if that makes you more comfortable. Sometimes that works better anyhow if you aren't comfortable talking to them in person.
  #4  
Old Feb 08, 2012, 10:40 PM
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Silent_tsol Silent_tsol is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2011
Location: Canada
Posts: 895
I talked to my school counselor today about the fact that I never talked to the profs directly about the letter and she said it was ok since they got the letter. Ideally, I would say "hey did you get my letter? This and this might happen" but I shouldn't lose sleepover having that talk and if I couldn't do it, I couldn't do it. So I feel much better after that.

Thank you for your replies
  #5  
Old Feb 20, 2012, 02:22 AM
Jaer007ll Jaer007ll is offline
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Posts: 13
Thank you for your replies
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attentionThis is an old thread. You probably should not post your reply to it, as the original poster is unlikely to see it.




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