By: Kristen Simon, M.Ed, Ed.S
Transition Specialist; Psychoeducational Counselor
As the school year picks up momentum, many parents of 12th-grade students find themselves wondering if their students will be truly ready to take the plunge into college life. Parents of younger students may also be noticing academic or social challenges and wondering how to ensure their teens are on the right path to college readiness. These are normal concerns, and they often require a closer look.
Transitioning from high school to higher education is a significant step, and it’s essential to gauge your child’s readiness to determine whether college is the right next step or if additional supports will be needed during the transition. While academic abilities that match the rigor of college are essential, there are many practical, non-academic skills that are just as vital for college success.
Below are some important academic and non-academic skills necessary for a smooth transition to higher education. Focusing on these abilities can help you assess whether a student is prepared for this new chapter.
- Academic Preparedness
- Engagement with coursework: Ability to read high volumes of text, think critically about the content and produce organized written work
- Study habits: Prepare for assessments effectively and in a timely manner
- Note-taking: Ability to take effective notes during class
- Executive functioning: Track and manage assignments and grades, plan for future goals, break down long-term assignments and meet deadlines, absorb and follow multiple syllabi, manage significant free time, follow their individualized schedule
- Independent Living skills
- Getting up: Wake up at a designated time without parent support
- Managing medications: Taking them at the appropriate time, managing refills, and tracking side effects
- Self-care: An independent hygiene routine (showers, haircuts, brushing teeth) they can follow on their own
- Health: Ability to treat a cold or minor illness; Can the student identify when an ailment is something more serious? Can they head to the health center independently?
- Maintain a living space: Room organization, keeping up with laundry, vacuuming, taking out the trash
- Maintain a basic healthy lifestyle: Nutrition choices, sleep hygiene, regular movement or exercise, coping skills
- Self-determination
- Disclosure: Describe their disability or diagnosis and the accommodations they require
- Asking for Help: Recognize when they need help and ask for it
- Self-advocacy: Advocate for accommodations with their college professor
- Goal setting: Is your adolescent able to make, set, and attain realistic goals?
- Self-awareness: Identify clear interests, preferences and strengths
- Career Awareness: Explored career paths based on preferences and strengths; Linked potential careers to college degrees or areas of study
- Social/Emotional skills
- Conflict resolution: Manage social conflict
- Community engagement: Find a community of peers
- Self-regulation: Regulate emotions under increased stress
- Teamwork: Work in a group effectively
Determining if your 12th grader is ready for college involves more than just evaluating their academic skills. Readiness looks different for every student, and knowing which of these areas your 12th grader has not yet mastered allows for skill building prior to college as well as setting them up with some supports to bolster this area as they transition.
Resources:
Landmark College: A guide to assessing college readiness for Parents of College Bound Children with Learning disabilities or ADHD.
College Freshman and Executive Function: The Often Unexpected Demands by Dr. Sophie Bellenis.
If you are interested in taking a deeper dive into the questions and concerns around college readiness and have the opportunity to ask questions in a live Q&A to NESCA’s Transition Services experts, register today for our upcoming free webinar on November 6, 2024 at 11:00 AM ET.
Register here: https://nesca-newton.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VVXHZBSESCaHAksfl_5oKg
NESCA offers many services designed to help students bridge the transition from high school to college, including executive function coaching, pre-college coaching, transition planning, and neuropsychological evaluation. To learn more specifically about our coaching services, visit: https://nesca-newton.com/coaching-services/ . To schedule an appointment with one of our expert clinicians or coaches, please complete our intake at: https://nesca-newton.com/intake/ .
About the Author
Kristen Simon, M.Ed, Ed.S, has worked with transition-aged youth as a licensed School Psychologist for more than a decade. She has extensive experience working with children and adolescents with a range of learning and social/emotional abilities. Kristen’s strengths lie in her communication and advocacy skills as well as her strengths-based approach. She is passionate about developing students’ self-awareness, goal-setting abilities, and vision through student-centered counseling, psychoeducation, social skills instruction, and executive functioning coaching. Mrs. Simon has particular interests working with children and adolescents on the Autism spectrum as well as individuals working to manage stress or anxiety-related challenges.
Mrs. Simon is an expert evaluator and observer who has extensive working knowledge of the special education process and school-based special education services, particularly in Massachusetts. She has been an integral part of hundreds of IEP teams and has helped to coordinate care, develop goals, and guide students and their families through the transition planning process. Mrs. Simon further has special expertise helping students to learn about their diagnoses and testing and the IEP process in general. She enjoys assisting students, families, and educators in understanding a student’s disability-related needs as well as the strategies that can help the student to be successful in both academic and nonacademic settings. Mrs. Simon has often been a part of teams in the years when students are initially participating in transition services, and she has helped countless students to build the skills necessary to be part of their first team meetings. She is committed to teaching students—as well as parents and educators—how to participate in student-centered team meetings and the IEP processes.
At NESCA, Mrs. Simon works as a transition specialist and psychoeducational counselor. She works with adolescents, their families, and their school communities to identify and build the skills necessary to achieve their postsecondary goals. Mrs. Simon provides transition assessment (including testing, functional evaluations, and observations), program observations and evaluations, case management and consultation, and individualized counseling and skills coaching.
To schedule an appointment with one of NESCA’s transition specialists, please complete our online intake form.
NESCA is a pediatric neuropsychology practice and integrative treatment center with offices in Newton, Plainville, and Hingham, Massachusetts; Londonderry, New Hampshire; the greater Burlington, Vermont region; and Brooklyn, New York (coaching services only) serving clients from infancy through young adulthood and their families. For more information, please email info@nesca-newton.com or call 617-658-9800.
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