Education
Director of Disability Services
Last updated
A Director of Disability Services ensures that students, employees, and visitors with disabilities have equal access to educational programs, services, and facilities. They oversee the accommodation review and approval process, manage disability services staff, coordinate with faculty and departments on accommodation implementation, and ensure the institution maintains compliance with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Role at a glance
- Typical education
- Master's degree in rehabilitation counseling, special education, or higher education administration
- Typical experience
- 4-7 years
- Key certifications
- Disability Services Provider (DSP) through AHEAD
- Top employer types
- Public universities, private colleges, community colleges, higher education consulting firms
- Growth outlook
- Steady demand driven by increasing student needs and rising regulatory expectations
- AI impact (through 2030)
- Augmentation — AI tools for captioning, screen reading, and digital accessibility remediation will expand the director's ability to manage institutional compliance, though the role's core focus on legal judgment and student interaction remains human-centric.
Duties and responsibilities
- Lead the interactive accommodation review process, evaluating disability documentation and approving appropriate academic and programmatic accommodations
- Supervise disability services coordinators, testing center staff, and assistive technology specialists
- Maintain compliance with ADA Title II, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and relevant state disability rights laws
- Serve as the institution's primary resource for faculty and staff on accommodation implementation, universal design, and disability etiquette
- Manage the testing center and alternative testing accommodations, including extended time, reduced distraction environments, and assistive technology access
- Coordinate with housing, dining, facilities, and transportation on physical access accommodations and barrier removal
- Develop and deliver disability-related training for faculty, staff, and student leaders across the institution
- Manage digital accessibility review processes in coordination with IT and web services to ensure ADA Title II digital compliance
- Handle formal accommodation grievances and respond to Department of Education OCR inquiries on disability-related complaints
- Maintain accurate records and generate reports on caseload, accommodation types, and compliance activity for institutional leadership and accreditors
Overview
A Director of Disability Services runs the institutional infrastructure that makes higher education accessible to students with disabilities. The job is part student services, part legal compliance, part faculty education, and part institutional change work — because making a university genuinely accessible is not just about approving accommodations for individual students, but about shifting how the institution designs its courses, technology, and physical spaces.
The accommodation review process is the most visible part of the role. Students who seek accommodations submit documentation of their disability and request specific accommodations through the office. The director and their staff review the documentation, engage in an interactive process with the student, and determine what accommodations are reasonable and appropriate. That determination requires both clinical judgment — understanding the functional impact of a given disability — and legal knowledge — understanding what the ADA and Section 504 require and where the limits of institutional obligation are.
Faculty education is a constant demand. Professors who have never had a student with a particular type of accommodation need guidance on how to implement it without discriminating in the process. The faculty member who doesn't understand why a student needs extended time for a test, or who resents having to provide an alternative format for a text, creates legal exposure for the institution and real barriers for the student. Directors who invest in faculty training reduce both problem frequency and escalation rates.
The institution also has obligations beyond individual accommodations — physical accessibility of facilities, digital accessibility of web content and course materials, accessibility of co-curricular programs, and equal access in housing and dining. Directors are increasingly being asked to lead or co-lead institution-wide accessibility planning processes that address these broader obligations.
Qualifications
Education:
- Master's degree required in rehabilitation counseling, counseling, special education, disability studies, higher education administration, or related field
- Doctorate preferred at research universities and institutions with complex compliance environments
- Certification as Disability Services Provider (DSP) through AHEAD is the field standard
Experience:
- 4–7 years in disability services in higher education, with increasing responsibility
- Supervisory experience managing professional staff and graduate assistants
- Experience with the formal accommodation review process, including documentation review and the interactive process
- Exposure to OCR complaint response or institutional accessibility audits is valued
Legal knowledge:
- ADA Titles I, II, and III as applicable to educational settings
- Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
- FERPA — student disability documentation is education record and subject to privacy protections
- 2024 DOE digital accessibility regulations under ADA Title II
- Institutional grievance procedures and due process requirements
Technical skills:
- Accommodations management software: Accommodate (formerly Symplicity), AIM (Accessible Information Management), or institutional systems
- Testing center management: scheduling, proctoring protocols, assistive technology deployment
- Assistive technology: screen readers (JAWS, NVDA), text-to-speech tools, captioning platforms, and note-taking applications
- Digital accessibility basics: WCAG 2.1 standards, web accessibility evaluation tools
Soft skills:
- Ability to engage students in crisis — disability services offices frequently handle mental health emergencies
- Clear and empathetic communication with students who may be disclosing their disability for the first time
- Faculty relations — the director who can earn faculty respect navigates accommodation conflicts more effectively than one who relies purely on legal authority
Career outlook
Demand for disability services directors is steady and likely to grow, driven by two forces: increasing student demand for disability services, and rising legal and regulatory expectations for institutional accessibility.
The population of students with documented disabilities seeking accommodations in higher education has grown substantially and consistently. The expansion of mental health diagnoses and the normalization of seeking accommodation for ADHD, anxiety, and depression have contributed, as has broader awareness among high school students and families who enter college already familiar with the accommodation process. More students seeking services means more caseload and, over time, more staffing and more director-level oversight.
The regulatory environment is also intensifying. The 2024 DOE digital accessibility rule under ADA Title II set specific technical compliance standards for public educational institutions that will require significant remediation work at most campuses. OCR disability-related complaints have been consistently common, and institutions that cannot demonstrate systematic compliance face the prospect of resolution agreements that impose oversight and corrective action obligations. Directors who can manage proactive compliance — rather than responding to complaints — are valuable at an institutional leadership level.
The field faces a chronic shortage of professionals with both strong disability services expertise and the administrative capacity to manage complex compliance functions. Salaries have risen as a result, though many institutions remain underinvested in disability services relative to the legal exposure they carry.
Career paths from director typically lead to Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs, Associate Dean of Students, or ADA/504 Compliance Coordinator for the broader institution. Some directors move into higher education consulting focused on accessibility program development or OCR resolution agreement monitoring.
Sample cover letter
Dear Search Committee,
I am applying for the Director of Disability Services position at [Institution]. I currently serve as Associate Director for Disability Services at [Institution], where I co-manage a caseload of approximately 1,100 registered students and supervise three disability services coordinators and two testing center staff.
My primary contribution over the past three years has been rebuilding our documentation and interactive process protocols. When I arrived, our documentation standards hadn't been reviewed since 2015, and our review process was inconsistent — two coordinators handling the same disability type were reaching different accommodation conclusions. I worked with our legal counsel and a consultant from AHEAD to update our documentation guidelines to reflect the ADA Amendments Act standards, trained the team on the interactive process framework, and developed a case consultation model for complex or novel accommodation requests. The documentation appeals we handle are down 40%, and we've had no OCR complaints in three years.
I have also taken the lead on digital accessibility at our institution, co-chairing a cross-functional task force with IT and Academic Affairs to assess our WCAG 2.1 compliance gaps and develop a remediation timeline. This has been new territory for all of us — our institution had not previously treated digital accessibility as a systematic compliance matter — and building the cross-departmental relationships to make it a shared priority has been as important as the technical work.
I hold an AHEAD Certified Disability Services Provider credential and a master's in rehabilitation counseling. I would welcome the opportunity to discuss how my experience aligns with [Institution]'s needs.
[Your Name]
Frequently asked questions
- What legal framework governs disability services in higher education?
- Two primary federal laws apply. Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 prohibits disability discrimination at institutions receiving federal financial assistance — which includes virtually all colleges and universities. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 and its 2008 amendments extend similar requirements. Together, they require institutions to provide reasonable accommodations that give students with disabilities equal access to programs and activities, and prohibit discriminatory treatment based on disability.
- What credentials are required to direct a disability services office?
- A master's degree in rehabilitation counseling, counseling, special education, higher education administration, or a related field is standard. Some positions require or strongly prefer a doctorate. Certification as a Disability Services Provider (DSP) through AHEAD (Association on Higher Education and Disability) is the field's primary professional credential. 4–7 years of disability services experience, including staff supervision, is typically required for director-level roles.
- How do directors determine what accommodations are 'reasonable'?
- The reasonable accommodation standard requires individualized assessment — there is no fixed list. Directors engage in an interactive process with the student (or employee), review disability documentation, and identify accommodations that provide equal access without fundamentally altering the essential requirements of the program. Extended time on exams, note-taking assistance, alternative format materials, and physical access modifications are among the most common. What is reasonable depends on the type of program and the nature of the functional limitation.
- What is digital accessibility and why is it a growing priority?
- Digital accessibility refers to the requirement that web content, course management systems, digital documents, and other electronic materials be accessible to users with visual, auditory, motor, and cognitive disabilities. The Department of Education issued updated ADA Title II regulations in 2024 setting specific technical standards (WCAG 2.1 Level AA) for public educational institution websites. Directors of Disability Services increasingly serve as institutional compliance leads or close partners with IT on digital accessibility remediation.
- How is the population of students with disabilities changing on college campuses?
- The proportion of college students with documented disabilities has grown substantially over the past two decades. Mental health conditions — anxiety, depression, ADHD — now represent the largest category of disability documentation at most institutions, having surpassed physical and sensory disabilities. This shift creates different service delivery challenges: the functional limitations of anxiety or ADHD in a testing environment are less visible than physical access needs but equally real, and documentation standards have evolved to reflect that.
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