Mitchell College announces the Institute for Neurodivergent Leadership, a landmark initiative that unifies more than 70 years of pioneering nationally recognized programs into a single, fully integrated ecosystem, the most comprehensive education-to-workforce pipeline for neurodivergent learners in the United States. At its recent Board of Trustees meeting, the board affirmed the Institute as a defining institutional commitment, underscoring Mitchell’s resolve to lead this work at a national level.
Unlocking Brilliance
Mitchell has always held a simple and powerful conviction: that every person carries within them a form of brilliance waiting to be unlocked, and that the role of education is to build the conditions in which that brilliance can emerge. Since the 1950s, Mitchell has developed a relationship-centered model of learning rooted in that belief, creating an environment where students from every background, and across the full spectrum of learning styles and life experiences, discover what they are capable of. The College does not sort students by what they cannot do; it starts with what they can.
The Institute for Neurodivergent Leadership formalizes and elevates that foundational work. In doing so, it unifies Mitchell’s proven programs, deep institutional expertise, and decades of documented outcomes within a cohesive structure—amplifying their reach, deepening their impact, and positioning Mitchell as the national model for inclusive, strength-based education. New components of the Institute include a first-of-its-kind supported living–learning housing model, expanded workforce integration pathways, and a coordinated infrastructure designed to extend Mitchell’s impact beyond the traditional college experience. Together, these efforts address critical workforce, housing, and educational needs, creating structured pathways toward independence and leadership for neurodivergent learners—who represent an estimated 15 to 20% of the population, including individuals with autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, dyslexia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and more.
Workforce Development, Leadership Cultivation, Lifelong Support Systems
By expanding these transformational learning opportunities to encompass workforce development, leadership cultivation, and lifelong support systems, Mitchell evolves from a college that changes individual lives to a national force that reshapes entire systems—making visible, and making possible, what has always been there.
“At Mitchell, we have always known that brilliance takes many forms. For more than seven decades, we have built programs, relationships, and environments in which every student can discover what they are truly capable of. Our Board of Trustees has affirmed what our mission has always demanded: that we take this work further and share it with the world. The Institute for Neurodivergent Leadership is our commitment to establishing the national standard—not just for neurodivergent education, but for what it looks like when every learner is seen, supported, and given the conditions to shine.”
—President Tracy Y. Espy, Ph.D., Mitchell College.
The Institute’s goals align directly with the priorities of Connecticut’s Governor’s Workforce Council, whose April 2025 strategic plan, “Work Forward: Pathways for Growth,” identifies the removal of barriers to workforce participation—particularly for “individuals with access needs”—as a core statewide objective. The plan’s stated mission is to “ensure all individuals, regardless of background, have a seamless and supported pathway from education and training to a good job.” It centers on a guiding principle that resonates deeply with Mitchell’s own: “Unlocking the potential of every person is key to maximizing workforce participation across all demographics.” The Institute answers that call with seven decades of practice, an established ecosystem of programs, and a proven capacity to deliver.
The Institute’s ecosystem encompasses:
Unified Neurodivergent Center of Excellence
Mitchell integrates its nationally recognized programs—Thames at Mitchell College, STAIRs (Skills Training, Advancement, and Individual Readiness), and SAILS (Self-Advocacy and Interpersonal Life-Skills Support)—into the Unified Neurodivergent Center of Excellence: a premier national destination for education that is genuinely built around the learner. This consolidation deepens collaboration among programs that have long operated in parallel, creating a more seamless and powerful continuum of support from the first day of a student’s journey through their career.
Living-Learning Environment for Adults 23+
The shortage of supported housing and meaningful employment for adults with neurodivergences and related conditions remains one of the most urgent unmet needs facing communities across the country. Thanks to a landmark $250,000 planning grant from the State of Connecticut’s Community Investment Fund, a powerful validation of Mitchell’s leadership in this space, the College is launching a comprehensive planning initiative for a Living-Learning Environment. This innovation model will feature affordable micro-living units, neurodivergent-trained staff, peer mentorship networks, 24/7 integrated support, life-skills development, independent living preparation, and vibrant community programming. This will not simply be a place to live. It will be a place where every resident can build the life they are capable of living.
Career Workforce Integration
The Governor’s Workforce Council’s own data notes that fewer than 25% of people with disabilities are currently employed—a gap that represents both an urgent social challenge and an extraordinary, untapped source of talent. Mitchell is establishing structured partnerships with employers and industry leaders to create clear pathways into high-demand fields, including manufacturing and skilled trades, directly responding to persistent unemployment among neurodivergent Americans and Connecticut manufacturers’ unprecedented workforce demand. When the right environment exists, neurodivergent workers do not just fill roles—they redefine them.
Programs for the Broader Community
The Institute extends Mitchell’s reach far beyond the enrolled student. Summer programs for middle and high schoolers, family support initiatives, and community-based learning experiences ensure that neurodivergent adolescents and their families have access to world-class guidance and community from an early age. Working adult programs, parent and caregiver training, community workshops, and online learning options reflect Mitchell’s conviction that no one navigating a neurodivergent journey should have to do so without exceptional support.
Professional Development
The Institute offers professional certificate programs in neurodivergent leadership, inclusive workplace design, and neurodivergent coaching—equipping organizations across sectors with the frameworks and practices needed to unlock the full potential of every person on their team. Customized programs for HR professionals, managers, educators, and healthcare providers translate Mitchell’s decades of expertise into tools that organizations can put to immediate use.
Research and Innovation
Grounded in more than 70 years of applied practice, the Institute serves as a national hub for research, best practices development, and consulting services—guiding institutions and organizations in building more inclusive, effective, and just systems of education and employment. Mitchell has never simply followed best practices. Mitchell has created them. The Institute ensures that continues.
