Research Symposium

26th annual Undergraduate Research Symposium, April 1, 2026

santiago lastra Poster Session 3: 1:45 pm - 2:45 pm / Poster #142


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BIO


Santiago Lastra was born in Colombia and grew up in Miami, FL. He is currently studying at Florida State University, pursuing a BA in Philosophy with a Minor in Economics, and is aiming to be a Lawyer.

The Deference Dilemma: Disability Accommodations in Law Schools

Authors: santiago lastra, Chris Busch
Student Major: Philosophy
Mentor: Chris Busch
Mentor's Department: Student Affairs
Mentor's College: College of Law
Co-Presenters: Alyssa Leon, Silvia Rodriguez

Abstract


This project investigates the administrative and pedagogical structures of academic accommodations within American legal education, specifically examining the alignment between centralized university models and the professional demands of the legal industry. Employing an empirical methodology, the research utilizes a 16-question survey distributed to accommodations administrators at all ABA-accredited law schools to evaluate institutional decision-making authority, the prevalence of professional skill-building interventions, and administrator concern levels regarding current accommodation frameworks. Preliminary data from 73 institutions indicates a significant trend toward administrative centralization; almost half of surveyed law schools defer both eligibility and scope determinations to non-law university units. The survey results further document institutional concern regarding a potential “licensing cliff,” identified through the perceived disparity between classroom accommodations and the rigid standards of state bar examinations. Furthermore, the data evidences a notable absence of integrated executive functioning or resilience training across the sampled schools. Ultimately, this survey identifies systemic trends in the administration of academic accommodations at law schools, providing a quantitative baseline for analyzing the relationship between institutional structure and the perceived professional readiness of accommodated law students.

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Keywords: Disability, Accommodations, Law School, Law, Disability Accommodations, Research,