
College Readiness for Students with Learning Differences: Building Skills for Life After High School
May 8, 2026
Supporting the Whole Child: Inside Counseling Sessions at Springer
At Springer School and Center, we know that learning and emotional well-being go hand in hand. School can be a place of growth and possibility, but it can also bring stress, frustration, anxiety, and big emotions. That’s why counseling support is such an important part of helping young people thrive.
Our counseling services are designed to meet students and young adults where they are with warmth, expertise, and deep respect for their individual journey.
This Mental Health Awareness Month, Springer is excited to welcome licensed counselor Brooke Richart, LPCC. Brooke has spent over 20 years working with children, teens, and young adults as a teacher, tutor, and counselor. She spent 10 years as a middle school teacher, specializing in teaching students with learning disabilities and ADHD.
Who We Serve
Counseling services are available for students and young adults approximately ages 10–18. Counseling at Springer supports individuals navigating anxiety and depression, ADHD and executive functioning challenges, school-related stress, peer or friendship struggles, and family communication challenges.
Whether a child is feeling overwhelmed by school demands, struggling socially, or working to better understand their own brain, counseling offers a safe and structured space for growth.
Approach & Philosophy
Counseling work with Brooke is grounded in a person-centered philosophy. Approaches may include:
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
- Mindfulness techniques
- Psychoeducation about how the brain works
- Bibliotherapy (using books to deepen understanding)

For students with ADHD, counseling often includes direct support for executive functioning skills and family education, integrating both emotional insight and practical tools.
At its core, counseling is not about “fixing” a child. It’s about helping them better understand themselves, develop strategies that work for their unique brain, and build confidence in navigating challenges.
What Happens in a Counseling Session?
After you contact Springer, you will do a free consultation call with Brooke to make sure it is a good fit. From there, you'll schedule an initial in-person meeting where parents join to share background information and collaborate on goals. Sessions then become more conversational and individualized. No two sessions are ever the same, because no two clients are the same.
A typical follow-up session might include:
- Talking through something that happened at school that week
- Learning a strategy for managing anxiety before a test
- Practicing executive functioning tools like planning or prioritizing
- Exploring emotions through creative activities
- Playing a game to make difficult conversations easier
- Reflecting on what worked (or didn’t) from a strategy tried between sessions
Clients are encouraged to leave each appointment with an idea or strategy to apply in real life. The goal is simple but powerful: life should feel better between sessions.
A Safe and Respectful Space
Trust is the foundation of effective counseling. Sessions are confidential, creating a space where young people can speak openly without fear of judgment.
While parents are important partners in growth, clients have agency in deciding what they would like to share after sessions. This balance helps build independence, self-awareness, and confidence - skills that extend far beyond the counseling office.
The Goal: Growing Toward Independence
One of the most meaningful aspects of counseling is that it is not meant to last forever. Progress is regularly discussed, and the ultimate objective is for clients to need sessions less frequently as they gain tools, confidence, and stability.
Ending counseling is viewed as a celebration: evidence of growth, resilience, and hard work.
A Warm Invitation
We all face moments when we need support. Counseling at Springer School and Center offers a compassionate, structured, and empowering space for young people to explore challenges and build lifelong skills.
If you are wondering whether counseling might be helpful for your child - or for yourself - consider starting with a conversation. Growth often begins with a single, brave step.



