The first few times any college student comes home for a Holiday break, parents might not observe any obvious social growth. This is not unusual. The family home is typically a safe zone. Young adults may not initiate much engagement or show a tendency to isolate if that was their pattern prior to leaving home.
It especially takes time for the social gains that we see in the young adults we work with at CIP to generalize to the home environment. Pressure isn’t generally effective, but a gentle push along with the right opportunity can help make it easier for them.
Here are some suggestions for setting the stage for a young adult with a learning difference such as autism and ADHD to demonstrate and retain social skills growth when visiting home during breaks from college or specialized post-secondary programs like CIP.
In advance of the transition home, students should:
The week before young adults go home, students should:
Examples of social goals:
Parent follow up:
When possible, coordinate an activity with people who knew the young adult prior to leaving home (family, friends, former educator, or group leader), so that they can give feedback to the young adult and/or parent on social growth. It is beneficial to hear the feedback about areas of improvement that were observed.Sometimes when young adults return to their familiar territory during a break in their education schedule, they tend to shift back into comfort mode. This might look like a regression in the soft skills that they are developing away from home. But with a little application of executive functioning skills, their positive social growth can be maintained over Holiday breaks.
By Jodi Butler Pierce, Assistant Program Director for CIP Brevard