Hello,
I'm a college advisor. We've just admitted our first student diagnosed with autism. He'll be here in the fall.
J. will be a commuter student, living at home because he doesn't feel that he's ready to live in a dorm. Among his other accommodations requests (a long list but nothing out of the ordinary), he has asked us for a quiet, private room to use while he's on campus. He needs to be alone between classes, to have a distraction-free place to study, and to have a "safe haven" in the event that he has a panic attack or sensory overload which could trigger a meltdown (the word he used).
We're trying to figure out how to meet this need. He'll already be taking his exams in one of Disability Services' distraction-free testing rooms, which is as quiet and private an area as we can make it. However, we don't want to tie up that room for other students during the entire part of the day that he's here, and the possibility apparently exists that a meltdown would cause him to involuntarily make noise that would distract students taking exams in the adjoining rooms. The study rooms in the library have interior windows and no privacy. We don't expect to have any extra rooms in quiet dorms that he could use during the day.
Does anyone have any suggestions or guidance as to what might work best for J.? Thanks!
John