Arrived today . . . !
I am pleased to report that our TCS Automotive Program has received its first auto donation - a 1998 Land Rover Discovery. This Land Rover's lucky owners have the great fortune of heading to Spain for a sabbatical year of study, and they decided to donate the old Rover and replace it when they get home.
I certainly appreciate their thinking of us, and the work we are doing for young people with challenges. The opening of our TCS Auto school is truly a long-standing dream come true for me. Even though school districts and state agencies are covering the tuition we still have other un-covered costs. Like most schools, we'll look to grants and donors to fill the gaps.
Cars like this may be sold to raise money for scholarships and other support, or they may be dismantled and turned into teaching materials. This particular Rover still has a lot of life left, so it will be put up for sale. We've actually already had a family ask about buying it, for one of their kids!
The TCS Auto Program is a satellite campus of Tri County Schools, part of Northeast Center for Youth and Families of Easthampton, MA. NCYF is a private nonprofit corporation serving young people and families with emotional and developmental challenges. The TCS Auto Program is located in John Elder Robison's Springfield Automotive Complex right next to Robison Service. John is an adult with autism, a bestselling author, an advocate for young people with differences, and one of the visionaries behind this school program. He's also the founder of J E Robison Service, a company that repairs and restores high-end automobiles for collectors and enthusiasts.
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Selasa, 27 Agustus 2013
Selasa, 28 Mei 2013
Trade School to open at Robison Service complex in Springfield MA
The automobile trade has been good to me. From a humble beginning in the garage beside my house, Robison Service has evolved into one of the leading import car specialists in New England. We’ve grown from a twelve by twenty foot stall to a complex of buildings; all by providing a service few people choose to offer.
Our business has succeeded through the hard work of many people, and the support of a loyal clientele. But before we had those things, there was me – an autistic adult who needed a job.
I started this company because I couldn’t fit in at the Big Corporation. It’s given me stability, and a sense of value in the community. As manufacturing and management jobs have evaporated from the businesses around me, it’s also given me security. No one will be outsourcing repair of Mom’s BMW, or restoration of Dad’s Jaguar anytime soon.
The same can be said for most of the trades. Electricians, plumbers, mechanics, HVAC people . . . we do very different work but we have a few things in common:
- We work with our hands
- We rely on focus, concentration, and specialized knowledge to succeed
- Technical skill means more than people skills in most of our jobs
- Our jobs are local, and they won’t be outsourced to India or China any day soon!
Becoming a skilled tradesman is one way a person like me – from an at-risk background, with some “differences” to set me apart – can find success in this society. An established tradesman will always have work, often with a better-than-average income for his area.
Knowing that, I’ve always wished there was a way I could teach the practical trades to young people like me. I get a steady trickle of emails asking that very thing. This summer, I am pleased to say we are taking some action.
We are seekign MA dept of education approval to open a trade school in the Robison Service complex.
We want to to teach basic mechanics, vehicle inspection, detailing, small engine repair and landscaping. All that will be done right here where I work every day – alongside real professionals practicing the same trades day in and day out.
We are partnering with NortheastCenter for Youth and Families, and Tri County Schools of Easthampton. Students will divide their time between shop classes in our complex and the regular academic program at Tri County’s Easthampton campus. I will be an advisor but the teaching will be done by legitimate special ed professionals, not just outlaws like me!
Tri County is a long-established non-profit Massachusetts Chapter 766 approved special education school. Students in our programs will be referred by state agencies, school districts, and private professionals. Some of our kids will be on the autism spectrum, but we will also take kids from at-risk home environments and kids with other developmental challenges.
We are presently recruiting a shop teacher and several other staff. Follow this link if you’re interested in working with us.
Write me if you’re a parent or prospective student interested in our programs. We hope to be open for fall semester 2013, subject to state approval, and we plan to begin taking applications for summer school 2014 very soon. I expect mostly day students but NCYF does have residential options.
I’m very excited about this new program. Frankly, it’s something of a dream come true. I can’t wait to see us open the doors, in a few short months. Do you know someone who wants to be in our first class?
Stay tuned for updates, and think hard about those trades. Not everyone is cut out for college. I wasn’t.
John Elder Robison is an adult with autism, and the parent of an adult son with autism. He serves on the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee of the US Department if Health and Human Services. He serves on numerous public and private boards, and he’s the founder of JE Robison Service of Springfield, MA. John is also the NY Times bestselling author of Look Me in the Eye, Be Different, andRaising Cubby. He lives in Western Massachusetts.
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