The Core Program starts with a two-year, certificate-bearing postsecondary program. The residential program, student activities, and curriculum focus on independent living and career development and are designed to create a college experience that feels both authentic and supported.
Our curriculum focuses on building skills that will prepare students to live independently and enter the work force. Students enroll in courses such as community navigation, personal finance, apartment living, meal planning and cooking skills, personal growth, and career readiness and support to achieve these goals. Students who excel in certain courses may enhance their learning with more advanced course content and/or Lesley University classes.
Students begin internship placements during the second semester of their first year at Threshold. Our curated internship sites provide opportunities to learn and further develop job related skills in various industries. Each site is offered employer training in best practices for
working with neurodiverse individuals and ongoing support from our career services staff. After discussion with the student and staff, they are matched with internship sites based on experience, personal interest, and support needed.
As students progress through the Core Program, our staff will engage in conversations with students and their support systems on planning for the steps beyond the Core Program by considering strengths and areas of growth. Each student will have their own journey in their path towards independence.
Students who find the greatest success are those who want to learn in a college setting, can live in a dorm or later, an apartment, with college-like residential supports, can attend work and classes without assistance from a one-on-one aid or paraprofessional, and are highly motivated to become independent. Students typically have these characteristics:
- Qualified for Special Education services and navigated the high school setting without 1:1 support; they may or may not have a high school diploma
- May have learning or developmental disabilities including (but not limited to) autism, nonverbal learning disabilities, ADHD, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, or multiple disabilities
- Might struggle in a degree-seeking program at this point in their lives
- Have a neurodiverse profile not inclusive of behavioral challenges