Undergraduate accommodations mostly apply to:
- Classes
- Exams
- Standardized coursework
Because undergraduate courses tend to follow similar instructional and assessment structures, accommodations are typically applied in consistent ways across courses (for example, extended exam time or reduced-distraction location for exams).
Graduate accommodations, on the other hand, go beyond classes and often involve:
- Program milestones; including but not limited to qualifying exams, comps, dissertations.
- Research expectations
- Teaching Assistant (TA) or Research Assistant (RA) job responsibilities
These aspects of graduate education are highly individualized and vary significantly by discipline, program, and role. Because program milestones and, in some cases, teaching assistant responsibilities are often required components of degree completion, graduate accommodations are often tailored and developed through a collaborative process that may involve:
- The student
- The graduate program or advisor
- Student Accessibility Services
- Sometimes HR or graduate deans (for TA/RA roles)
Unlike undergraduates, graduate students are also navigating multiple roles at once—student, researcher, instructor, and student employee—which means accommodations may fall under different policies and legal frameworks, depending on the context.
Difference Between Accommodations (Graduate Student)