The TCS Automotive High School Program - six months later
Seven years ago, parents began coming to Robison Service,
offering their autistic kids as apprentices.
Shortly after, autistic adults began coming, offering themselves. I didn’t have a means of taking them on, but
I started thinking.
Robison Service, where it all began |
Two years ago, I began to envision of a school where we
could teach the auto trade to young people with challenges. I started talking about the idea, and
wondering how it could be accomplished.
A year and a half ago, I proposed the idea to Paul Rilla and his staff and they agreed to join forces in pursuit of that goal. A few months later – at a public vocational
program nearby - we found a shop teacher in Mark Girard, and other staff stepped forward to volunteer for our program.
Nine months ago, the Massachusetts Department of Special
Education licensed a part of our commercial garage complex as a satellite high
school campus. We had the green light to
open.
Six months ago we received our first car donation. What’s a school without cars to work on? Today, the bays are full.
September 2013 saw our first day of school. For the first
time ever, a van delivered high school students to our Springfield Auto
Complex.
Instructor Mark Girard and Master Technician Danny Ferrari discuss a Mercedes-Benz engine problem with a student, as a Land Rover waits for attention in the background. |
Two months ago Mike Loth from Bosch Automotive demonstrated
their commitment to education and our program by donating $30,000 worth of
state of the art Bosch wheel and alignment equipment. We can now teach our students on the same
machines that are used commercially in high end dealerships all over the world.
Richard Santore from the commercial side of our complex admires the new Bosch front end and wheel equipment. Our TCS school is state of the art thanks to Bosch Automotive's support! |
Today we are moving into the final months of our first year
of the program. We have nine wonderful students. I’m so proud of what they’ve done, and what
the teachers and staff have accomplished in building this school and program. The founding vision was mine, but Paul, Mark,
Meredith, Nestor, Barry, Walter and all the others worked so
hard to make it real, and they deserve the credit here.
And the first students helped build the facility alongside
us, and they showed us what works and what doesn’t. Please give them all a round of applause . . .
Visitors sometimes ask what our vision is. It’s simple, really.
We agree that high school should teach the old standbys –
reading, writing, and arithmetic. You
can’t get far in today’s world if you can’t read, or count change. We even agree with teaching new subjects, and
passing state-mandated tests like the MCAS.
We know the rules for graduation.
But we think high school needs to go farther. We believe high school
should teach a student what she needs to make a living in the world today, at a
livable level. Not as a minimum wage
worker.
A TCS student dismantles and inspects brakes on a Toyota SUV April 2014 |
We think every high school graduate deserves the chance to
step out of school, and go to work in a field that interests them with skills
they acquired in school. We think those
skills should be enough to support them, and start them on the road to independent
life.
The Europeans have done this right along, with their apprenticeship programs.
The Europeans have done this right along, with their apprenticeship programs.
We think those skills, and the academic foundation that
precedes them, should be enough to take our graduates into college or the
workforce, and offer a good shot at success on either path.
Two TCS students work on a BMW motorcycle, April 30, 2014 |
To that end, we’re building alliances with employers and
colleges to help our graduates down whichever path they choose. Stand by for more news on that this summer. Call us now if you've got a student you'd like to enroll for fall. We take referrals from public schools all over Western Mass. We have transport and residential options too.
This whole thing was nothing but a dream five years
ago. Imagine where we’ll be, five years
from now.
John Robison
May 1, 2014
John Elder Robison is a founder and advisor to the TCS
Automotive program, a part of Tri County School, which is itself part of
Northeast Center for Youth and Families in Easthampton, MA. The TCS Auto program is located at 347 Page
Boulevard in Springfield, MA – in the Robison Springfield Automotive Complex. John is an autistic adult and advocate for
young people with differences. He’s the founder of J E Robison Service, and the author of Look Me in the Eye, Be Different, and Raising Cubby, along with
dozens of magazine and journal articles. He serves on the Interagency Autism
Coordinating Committee for the US Dept. of Health and Human Services, and many other
government and private autism committees. John is the Neurodiversity Scholar in
Residence at the College of William & Mary.
Find him online at www.johnrobison.com
Comments
Thank you so much for thinking about the people who slip through the cracks of our society and education system.
Thanks for sharing this.
Workshop Equipment
I have no doubt he will eventually find his way, but it sure would have helped had he been able to participate in a program like this rather than being defined by the public school system as a "problem" that needed to be "fixed".
Amazing work John ... amazing!