Its difficult to say how much of a 'disability' the girl has and therefore just how difficult it was for her to pull-off that GPA. People without disabilities just don't 'get' how difficult it is to live with a disability. I know, I went from a picture of perfect health to having a disability, and I would never in a thousand years be able to make the 'former' me understand how difficult every aspect of my life would become.
I was so accustomed to doing far better than average yet always putting-out a half-hearted effort. I was a classic underachiever because I could be and get away with it. Now I have to put-forth 100% all the time just to achieve the average. It was quite an adjustment, one that I haven't fully made or accepted to this day.
I can't fault anyone for not understanding because it is something that is beyond comprehension until it happens to you and you live it, not for a day, or a week, but hour-by-hour, day-by-day, every waking moment it is with you for months. Then you understand it.
Our health, and to what extent we are dependent upon it (completely), are taken for granted by almost every reasonably healthy person whose barriers to achievement are typically self-imposed more than anything else.
I suspect if this girl was half of the monster 'princess' some have made her out to be, she wouldn't have done as well as she did in her GPA and SAT. She may have spent the most difficult 4 years of her life to achieve what would be a stellar accomplishment for perfectly healthy students. And they want her to 'share' this distinction with students whom did not do as well despite having no disability at all?
I withhold judgement.