Pregnancy & Related Conditions
Campus Life
For more information, to request pregnancy-related accommodations, or to report pregnancy-related discrimination, please contact
Cynthia L. Garrett
Title IX Coordinator & Lead Investigator
Ehinger Center, Suite 147
973-408-3635
titleixofficer@drew.edu
Students experiencing pregnancy or related conditions have the right to equal access to education, employment, and other University programs and activities. If you are experiencing pregnancy or a related condition and are looking for resources, accommodations, or support, please contact the Title IX Office at titleixofficer@drew.edu.
Title IX Rights*
- You have equal access to classes and activities.
- You are entitled to accommodations for both your pregnancy and childbirth, including excused absences, extra time on assignments, and other reasonable accommodations that would be provided to a student with a temporary medical condition.
- Your school/department must excuse your absences due to pregnancy or childbirth for as long as your doctor says is necessary. Schools/departments must also reschedule exams missed due to pregnancy or childbirth.
- When you return, your school/department must allow you to return to the same academic and extracurricular status you had before you left. They must also give you a chance to make up for missed work.
- Your school/department cannot make you take time off if you don’t want to. However, they must provide you with withdrawal/re-enrollment information should you choose to explore that option.
- You cannot be excluded from a special program because you are pregnant.
- Your school can only require you to provide medical records to take part in a class or activity if they require students with medical conditions to do the same.
- Your school/department cannot make you change your major or degree program because you are pregnant or experiencing a related condition. They also cannot force you to attend an alternate program, like an evening program.
- You can take part in activities for as long as you want. Your school/department cannot stop you from joining clubs, going to events, or participating in research unless the same rules apply for all students who have a temporary medical condition.
- Any lactating student has the right to a clean and private lactation space on campus. For more information regarding lactation spaces and locations, please refer to the Lactation Space Guidelines. To reserve a lactation space, please complete the Lactation Space Request Form.
- If you feel any of the above rights have been violated, please contact the Title IX Office immediately
* National Women’s Law Center, Pregnant and Parenting Students’ Rights, 2025, https://nwlc.org/resource/pregnant-and-parenting-students-rights-2/.
New Jersey Law ensures equal rights and opportunities for pregnant students in institutions of higher education
New Jersey Law (S-1489/A-1465) protects the rights of pregnant students. The law:
- Prohibits institutions of higher education from requiring a student to take a leave of absence, withdraw from an associate, bachelor’s or graduate program or limit her studies due to pregnancy or issues related to pregnancy.
- Requires schools to provide pregnant students with reasonable accommodations, for example allowing students to maintain a safe distance away from hazardous materials or make up examinations missed due to pregnancy-related issues, for the successful completion of coursework and research. Institutions would be required to develop, adopt and distribute policies regarding pregnancy discrimination.
- A graduate student who chooses to take a leave of absence because she is pregnant or recently has given birth will be allowed a minimum of 12 months to prepare for and take preliminary and qualifying examinations. The normative time to degree while in candidacy for a degree for a pregnant graduate student would be increased in an amount equal to the length of the leave of absence, unless a longer extension is medically necessary.The law also allows a graduate student who is not the birth parent to take additional time to prepare for preliminary and qualifying examinations if he or she needs to care for his or her partner or child.
- A student in good academic standing who takes a leave of absence would return to their associate, bachelor’s or graduate program in good academic standing under the law.