High School Transition
Differences Between High School and College
 
Legal Responsibilities
                  
                  High School:
High Schools are governed by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
College:
Colleges are governed by the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act but not governed by IDEA.
High School:
Parents are notified and required by law to give permission for any decisions regarding
                              their sons or daughters.
College:The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) mandates that the College cannot release any information concerning any student regardless of age. This is the case for dual enrolled students as well.
Differences in Responsibility
High School:
The school is responsible for the right to education for all children.
College:
The student is responsible to choose whether or not to attend College, to demonstrate
                              qualifications for College attendance, and to compete with other students for classroom
                              seats.
High School:
The school is responsible for a free disability evaluation and documentation.
College:
The student is responsible for providing current documentation of disability to the
                              college.
High School:
The school is responsible for an Individual Educational Program (IEP) that determines
                              placement and appropriate support services.
College:
The student is responsible for planning his/her own education, identifying resources,
                              and requesting reasonable accommodations.
High School:
The school is responsible for implementing the IEP, making services available and
                              including them in the schedule.
College:
The student is responsible for implementing his/her own academic plan and requesting
                              services each time they are needed.
High School:
The school is responsible for fundamental curriculum alterations to allow individualized
                              goals and objectives.
College:
The student is responsible for meeting the unaltered fundamental College academic
                              standards, standard course objectives, code of conduct, and program requirements.
High School:
The school is responsible to provide personal services such as transportation, mobility
                              between classes, or personal attendants.
College:
The student is responsible to provide his/her own personal services to assure independence
                              and safety.
High School:
The school administrators, teachers and parents advocate for students.
College:
The student is responsible to advocate for him/herself.
Academic Differences
High School:
The school establishes a class schedule that fills most of the time during the school
                              day.
College:
The student is responsible to plan how to use free time between College classes.
High School:
High school teachers provide a lot of assistance with reading and studying.
College:
The student is responsible for reading text-books, memorizing information, applying
                              concepts, studying, thinking critically, and writing on his/her own.
High School:
High school teachers provide regular homework.
College:
The student is responsible for independent learning such as reviewing notes, or studying
                              outside sources in the library or online. College professors may require only one
                              or two out-of-class assignments per semester.
High School:
The school expects students to spend about 2 or 3 hours a day on homework.
College:
The student is responsible for studying an additional 3 hours for every hour in a
                              College class. This may mean 6 or more hours of studying per day.
High School:
High school teachers give tests on a regular basis.
College:
The student is responsible to prepare for fewer opportunities to pass tests. College
                              professors may only give mid-terms and final tests.
Resources and Links
Students with disabilities preparing for post-secondary education: know your rights and responsibilities.