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About

An overview of Mansfield Hall

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Our Approach

How we work with college students

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Four Core Areas

Defining the Four Core Areas and our Coaching Model

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A Day In The Life

Learn about what life is like at Mansfield Hall

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Living

Adulting 101

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Learning

Academic and Executive Functioning support

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Giving

Our students have something valuable to offer their community

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Engaging

Social community is at the heart of The Mansfield Hall Experience

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Locations

Learn about our locations

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Admissions

Steps to becoming a part of Mansfield Hall

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Videos

Check out our video library

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FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

3 Tips for Students with Neurodiversity

It Is Time To Reconsider How We Use The Term “Independence” With Neurodiverse College Students Who May Have An ASD, NLD, or NVLD Diagnosis

The Goal for neurodiverse college students is not “Independence.” There. We said it. And we meant it. But please, let us explain…

For neurodiverse students with a diagnosis of NLD, NVLD, or ASD, it can be confusing to consistently have educators and family focus on the mythical quest for “independence” – especially when it is not actually what we mean. No successful adult is an island unto themselves, independent from everyone around them, existing in a vacuum and disconnected from others. Far from it! 

Rather, successful adults have partners and friends, family and coworkers, and they interact with a whole host of individuals who play an important part in their lives. Successful adults are both the central characters and active participants in their own ongoing narrative. They are aware of their strengths and areas of growth, they ask for and receive support, and they are able to weave that support into the fabric of their lives to create purpose and meaning, both for themselves and for others. They are not independent. They are interdependent.

College can be a complicated time for emerging young adults – they are embarking on a process of healthy individuation from family but might not yet have fully developed the skills needed to be successful interdependent young adults. And in the interim, it is simply too easy for emerging young adults who keep hearing the mantra of “independence” to become confused, thinking that it is possible The Goal is to become independent in the vein of Robinson Crusoe or Chuck Noland (Tom Hanks in Cast Away). Fun Fact: Both of these are fictional characters in fictional stories!

No. The Goal is not Independence. It is something much more interesting.

The Goal is for emerging young adults and college students to create an interconnected web of healthy interdependence, at the center of which is an individual with agency who is playing an active role in the continuous creation, cultivation, and curation of their own experience. The goal is self-awareness, an actualization of the self, agency, the ability to create and sustain connections, and the capacity to both give and receive support and help as needed. 

No “successful adult” is independent. Instead, they are active participants in their own ever-evolving experience of interconnectedness. College can be a great place to explore this stage of life, and Mansfield Hall can be a great place to learn and practice these skills. Through connection with community, and ongoing support in a continuous coaching model, Mansfield Hall students have the opportunity to learn, practice, and master the skills of being an autonomous individual with agency – who is also interconnected and interdependent. This involves students developing the self-awareness (metacognition), self-advocacy, and applied executive functioning skills required to be self-directed individuals, and as an added bonus it can be pretty fun to be a part of a supportive social community, too!

So let’s be careful when we use the term “independence” with any college student, but especially college students with an ASD, NLD, or NVLD diagnosis. It is simply too easy to send the message we expect them to “do it all on their own” – when, in fact, none of us do! Instead, let’s continue to encourage students to learn how to do what they can on their own, but also learn the joy and wonder of what they can create when they sit at the center of an interconnected web of healthy interdependence with the world around them.

Last but certainly not least, Eugene students! 

What class are you most looking forward to this semester?
Shanah Tovah! (שנה טובה)

Happy Rosh Hashanah to all who celebrate!

For anyone wondering, today is the start of the Jewish New Year.