00darkfox00
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? PA
So today I was told that I have 3 absences in a class and needed to go to disability services with my issues to get them excused otherwise the class would be dropped, I know this is school policy, but to me this seems arbitrary, I paid with a private student loan, so what gives the college the right to cease providing a service to me that I have already paid for? I was told there have been issues with students getting free government loans and living off of them and not attending classes but if my loan is private I don't understand how this would matter to me.
I'm not disrupting the class by missing anything, in fact, I have never bothered the professor to explain what I missed, I catch up on my own, so I cannot understand why this policy exists. Im not looking to fight this legally but I may talk to someone from the college after I take care of my current issue.
Anyway, I'm willing to see how I may be in the wrong in this situation, but to me this seems like I'm being taken advantage of, I have issues sleeping and with anxiety so I realize now I should have brought this up to disability services earlier, so, is this policy arbitrary, illegal, or unethical, or am I missing something?
edit: Someone told me that this policy exists because you're a representative of the school and missing 3 classes would mean you don't know the material and therefore are a poor representative, but this argument to me assumes that the school has no faith that their classes adequately test the material you know and grade you appropriately, 3 classes can be made up using the textbook, asking other students and using their online resources, so again, I don't understand.
Thank you for your help
So today I was told that I have 3 absences in a class and needed to go to disability services with my issues to get them excused otherwise the class would be dropped, I know this is school policy, but to me this seems arbitrary, I paid with a private student loan, so what gives the college the right to cease providing a service to me that I have already paid for? I was told there have been issues with students getting free government loans and living off of them and not attending classes but if my loan is private I don't understand how this would matter to me.
I'm not disrupting the class by missing anything, in fact, I have never bothered the professor to explain what I missed, I catch up on my own, so I cannot understand why this policy exists. Im not looking to fight this legally but I may talk to someone from the college after I take care of my current issue.
Anyway, I'm willing to see how I may be in the wrong in this situation, but to me this seems like I'm being taken advantage of, I have issues sleeping and with anxiety so I realize now I should have brought this up to disability services earlier, so, is this policy arbitrary, illegal, or unethical, or am I missing something?
edit: Someone told me that this policy exists because you're a representative of the school and missing 3 classes would mean you don't know the material and therefore are a poor representative, but this argument to me assumes that the school has no faith that their classes adequately test the material you know and grade you appropriately, 3 classes can be made up using the textbook, asking other students and using their online resources, so again, I don't understand.
Thank you for your help
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