Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

NBCC campuses improve support for students on the autism spectrum

WATCH ABOVE: New Brunswick Community College staff are learning how to better support students with autism spectrum disorder. Global’s Shelley Steeves reports – Sep 13, 2016

Roughly 350 staff and instructors at New Brunswick Community College (NBCC) campuses across the province recently completed specialized training to better accommodate students on the autism spectrum.

Story continues below advertisement

“Transition for anybody going to post-secondary is difficult,” said Mandy Bellefleur, learning specialist at NBCC Moncton campus.

“And for a student with autism it can be sometimes debilitating in some areas. They might run into trouble knowing what their schedule is, knowing how to follow that schedule.”

“I don’t have organizational skills,” said 18-year-old NBCC student Andrew Nelson, who has Asperger syndrome. “If you don’t know any information on [autism], it can be hard to deal with the student, but they deal with me pretty well.”

Nelson is one week into his business administration course at the Moncton campus and says so far, he feels right at home in the classroom and welcomes the extra support.

Bellefleur and Nelson’s instructors are helping him with organization and lightening his workload until he settles in. Coming from Quispamsis, this is also Nelson’s first time away from home.

“I am not going to lie it was pretty nerve-racking at first,” Nelson said.

Story continues below advertisement
“The independence that is put on [students] can be very difficult so we try to help with the transition,” Bellefleur added.

Autism diagnoses on the rise in New Brunswick

Lisa Hebert, an autism consultant, says the number of young people diagnosed with autism is on the rise in New Brunswick, so more support is needed so more young adults with autism move on to post-secondary studies.

“You might have different students who have tried to go through post secondary and have struggled and now with supports in place they will be more successful,” said Hebert.

This year there are roughly 40 students with autism enrolled in NBCC campuses across the province. Bellefleur is hoping those those numbers will increase in the coming years.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article