| Do you think he will be able to cope with the dining hall? The need for a kitchen would probably get your waiver approved. |
Cool. He could kill himself in a single too, and bleed out while no one notices. |
Any child could have self harm issues. It’s not nice of you to sort of mock the worry that parents of kids who are autistic or have social anxiety feel — you don’t think these parents worry every day that something will happen to their child and due to the social impairment no one will be there to help them or notice they are gone? It’s absolutely one of the worst parts of parenting a child like this. But what OP is saying is that cohabitation will significantly increase her child’s stress level, which could then greatly increase the risk of self harm. So that’s different and it sounds like greater than the risk of harm due to an isolated living arrangement. |
Y son has a medical single for autism at Mary Washington and is thriving. To get the single, it was more than just needing a place to decompress as his needs are higher than that. |
Yes, GNU gave my autistic daughter a single. OP, you need to escalate the problem. |
By the way his stim is also pacing, but the dorm rooms are too small to pace and the larger common room was full of tables. He found solitary spots on campus to study and pace. I think the imconvenience of that resulted in a bit less pacing over time (just a bit). |
Reach out to the school’s disability office and see how they handle the issue. If the school doesn’t have a dedicated disability office, regroup. If they do have a dedicated disability office and are the ones that suggested to autistic people sharing a room, regroup. If the disability office cannot provide existing accommodations from current IEP, regroup. Some schools support neurodivergent students well other leave them to their own devices. |
| Some ND kids can better adjust to sharing space as they get older (mine did), but I understand based on past experience you feel there's no possibility for success here. I think living off-campus would be too challenging for a ND kid already dealing with that much change already. So I agree with PP to reach out to the disability office. If no help, then I vote defer, with a very clear explanation why. |
What were his higher needs, out of curiosity? We also have an autistic teen interested in Mary Washington. Thanks! |
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My autistic kid actually wanted to try living with a roommate. We were worried but it worked out great (the roommate was randomly assigned).
That being said, if your child needs a single, I would keep pushing hard. From what I know, it needs to be documented as a real medical need with supporting documentation. |
+1 If you really think there's no chance of his succeeding with a roommate--is that what he thinks?--then agree. |
| They don't have the smartest workers in the housing department. |
This. Huge red flag!! IME, living off campus year 1, missing all the new/meeting friends etc. opportunities is a sure way to end up on the periphery socially, unfortunately. I watched this happen (on a parent board of a university with a mix of on campus housing and local commuters). After the phones calls, perhaps a letter with something to the effect of, Our understanding is that a single room was requested as a disability accommodation and all required documentation was submitted. Please confirm whether the accommodation has been approved and, if not, provide the basis for the denial and information regarding the appeal process. |
Sorry, GMU. Make sure you register with disability services the summer before you show up so they can help with housing. |
| God damn. No wonder it gets harder every year for upperclassmen to secure single rooms at residential colleges. I don't remember ANYONE needing or demanding a single room accommodation as a freshman when I was in school. |