Disability and discrimination: CU Boulder student “effectively banned” from graduating due to course requirement

Editor’s Note: This is the second article of a two-part series about problems students have accessing disability accommodations at CU Boulder. The first article examined the difficulties of three students with the Disability Services Office.

Brendan Towle has dysgraphia, which means he can’t handwrite more than two paragraphs at a time.

The muscles in his hand lack a sense of pressure, and he can’t control how hard he presses on a page. So when he writes, it creates a slow and steady, dull pain until it’s so overwhelming he’s unable to hold a pencil.

But drawing and writing by hand is mandatory in the Introduction to Field Geology course required for Towle’s geology major at the University of Colorado Boulder. He wasn’t able to meet the course requirements due to his disability, so he dropped the class in May 2021. When he tried to reenroll almost a year later with disability accommodations — an adjustment made to a classroom so people with disabilities can have equal opportunity — he was denied.

Without a way to fulfill the course requirement, Towle said, he’s “effectively banned” from graduating and has faced discrimination and retaliation from his professors in the geology department.

“There have been complaints on how the course design is ableist for decades, and no one has ever really done anything about it,” Towle said. “This isn’t even a new complaint, it’s just the professor that teaches it is unwilling to change it.”

CU Boulder spokesperson Nicole Mueksch said the university can’t comment on specific student cases due to privacy laws. Lon Abbott, the professor in charge of the course design, also cited student privacy laws and said he “cannot comment on the specifics of any particular case.”

“The University of Colorado Boulder and disability services complies with all federal and state civil rights laws,” Mueksch said. “We’re committed to providing all the services we offer without discrimination.”

Towle said the class is “rough even for an able student,” requiring 5 to 10 miles of hiking twice a week and turning in assignments recorded and drawn by hand in the field. When Towle asked disability services and Abbott if he could type notes and use graphic design tools instead of handwriting, he was denied the accommodation.

“My disability itself isn’t all that disabling because in the modern world we have typing everywhere,” Towle said. “It shouldn’t be that big of a deal.”

When Towle initially took the course, he tried to audio record notes in the field with a $100 tape recorder he bought, but he couldn’t hear the recordings over the wind. Even if he could hear it, Towle said, it would’ve taken hours of work to transcribe and all notes are required to be handwritten anyway.

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