OAT Accommodations for Students with Psychological Disabilities

The OAT is a demanding admissions exam that combines biology, chemistry, reading comprehension, physics, and quantitative reasoning in one sitting. If ADHD, anxiety, dyslexia, autism, depression, or another condition makes it harder to focus, read efficiently, manage pacing, or sustain stamina across the full exam, you may qualify for OAT accommodations. Get a psychological evaluation written to support your OAT accommodations request.

$1,200 total (60%+ below typical $3,000-$5,000 rates)

See why clients find our plans cost-effective.
Pre-optometry student preparing for the OAT with disability accommodations support

Why OAT Accommodations Matter

The OAT puts science knowledge, reading, physics reasoning, and math performance under sustained time pressure. For students with psychological disabilities, standard conditions can turn disability-related barriers into lower scores that do not reflect actual academic readiness. Accommodations help create fairer conditions so optometry schools can better evaluate your preparation for professional training.

5:05

total administration time, including the optional tutorial, scheduled break, and survey.

230

multiple-choice questions across Survey of the Natural Sciences, Reading Comprehension, Physics, and Quantitative Reasoning.

90 min

for the Survey of the Natural Sciences alone, requiring steady pacing across biology, general chemistry, and organic chemistry.

How Accommodations Can Help on the OAT

Accommodations do not make the OAT easier. They reduce the extent to which disability-related barriers interfere with your ability to show what you know in science, reading, physics, and quantitative reasoning.

Survey of the Natural Sciences

This section combines biology, general chemistry, and organic chemistry into one long block. Extra time can help if slower processing speed, ADHD, anxiety, or re-reading needs make it harder to pace accurately across 100 items.

Reading Comprehension

Dense scientific passages can be especially difficult for students with dyslexia, ADHD, anxiety, or slower reading fluency. Better pacing can help the score reflect your actual comprehension instead of reading-speed bottlenecks.

Physics

Physics problems can become much harder when working memory, processing speed, or anxiety interferes with multistep reasoning under time pressure.

Quantitative Reasoning

When math-related pacing, attention, or anxiety drives careless errors, extra time and better regulation can help you show stronger reasoning rather than frantic test management.

Common OAT Accommodations

Extended Time

Extended Time

Often requested when reading fluency, slower processing speed, working memory, or attention regulation make standard OAT timing inaccessible.

Approved Break Adjustments

Approved Break Adjustments

Helpful when you need additional time to regulate attention, reduce anxiety, manage fatigue, or address medication or medical needs.

Access to Approved Items

Access to Approved Items

Some otherwise prohibited items may be allowed in advance under testing accommodations when supported by documentation and approved through the OAT process.

Other Testing Modifications

Other Testing Modifications

The OAT Program reviews requests individually and may approve other changes to testing procedures when they are appropriately linked to documented functional limitations.

Conditions That May Qualify

ADHD

Difficulty sustaining attention, regulating effort, and managing pacing across long, tightly timed science and reasoning sections.

Learning Disabilities

Dyslexia and related learning disabilities that affect reading rate, written-language efficiency, processing speed, or math-related performance.

Anxiety Disorders

Test anxiety, panic symptoms, or generalized anxiety that interfere with concentration, speed, and accurate problem solving.

Depression

Mental fatigue, slowed processing, and concentration difficulties that become more pronounced over a long admission test.

Autism Spectrum Disorder

Processing differences, sensory sensitivities, and executive-functioning challenges that can affect access under standard OAT conditions.

Traumatic Brain Injury

Changes in attention, memory, processing speed, or stamina after concussion or other brain injury.

How It Works

1

Schedule Your Evaluation

Meet with a licensed psychologist who understands accommodations documentation. We review your history, symptoms, and how they affect your OAT performance under standard conditions.

2

Complete the Assessment from Home

You complete evidence-based testing remotely via telehealth. The evaluation can examine attention, executive functioning, processing speed, learning, and psychological symptoms that affect long-form standardized testing.

3

Get Your OAT-Ready Report

Receive a comprehensive report that explains your diagnosis, current functional limitations, and why specific OAT accommodations are appropriate. You can then submit it with your OAT testing accommodations request form and any records of prior accommodations.

$1,200 total (60%+ below typical $3,000-$5,000 rates)

Typical comprehensive psychological evaluations cost $3,000-$5,000. Our $1,200 total is 60%+ below those rates, and the same evaluation can often support both an OAT accommodations request and later disability-services requests in college, optometry school, or other academic settings.

See why clients find our plans cost-effective.

Payment plans available - Telehealth in 42 states

OAT Accommodations FAQ

Still have questions?

Let us know!

Do Not Let a Disability Pull Down Your OAT Score

You deserve testing conditions that let optometry schools see your scientific readiness and reasoning, not just your ability to work around disability-related barriers for five hours. Get the documentation you need to request OAT accommodations with confidence.