
Supporting Summer Growth for Neurodivergent Learners
June 18, 2026
Summer Learning, Springer Style
Summer at Springer is anything but sleepy.
While summer is a welcome time to rest and recharge, long breaks from school can sometimes lead to the “summer slide,” when students lose some of the academic skills they worked hard to build during the year. At Springer, Adventures in Summer Learning helps students keep growing through activities that feel fun, supportive, and just the right amount of adventurous.
Across campus, students are learning, creating, moving, laughing, problem-solving, and building confidence. From academic skill-building to activity clubs, mini camps, executive functioning support, and high school readiness courses, summer gives students a chance to strengthen important skills while staying connected to learning.

For students entering grades 1–5, summer mornings begin with Morning Expeditions, where campers work on reading and math in a structured, encouraging environment. Reading instruction supports skills like decoding, encoding, blending, and fluency, while math focuses on areas such as number sense, computation, fractions, and word problems. Students also participate in Challenge by Choice, where movement, play, and problem-solving help strengthen social-emotional skills.
In the afternoons, Springer Activity Club brings even more energy to campus. Students spend time making friends, playing outside, creating, imagining, and exploring new interests. Mini Camps add extra adventure, with options like sports, cooking, art, theater, space camp, and even chess with a local chess pro. These activities may feel like pure summer fun, but they also help students practice communication, flexible thinking, planning, and perseverance.
"My favorite part is playing on the playground and doing games in math."
-Adventures in Summer Learning Camper
For students entering grades 6–8, summer is a chance to strengthen skills and build independence before the next school year. Middle school offerings include Study Skills, English Language Arts, Math, and Social Savvy. Students practice executive functioning strategies like time management, organization, and planning while also building academic confidence and positive social skills.
High school students can also make summer count with courses focused on real-world readiness and academic success. Options include Financial Literacy, Presentation Skills, Note Taking, Reading Comprehension, Writing and Grammar, and Executive Functioning. These courses help students continue building the tools they need for school, work, and life beyond the classroom.
“I like being with a small group because I can ask questions and get help when I need it.”
-Adventures in Summer Learning Camper
Across every grade level, Springer’s summer programs are designed to meet students where they are while helping them move forward. Students are not just reviewing skills or filling summer days. They are preventing learning loss, discovering strategies, building friendships, practicing independence, and experiencing the joy of learning in a place that understands them.
From chess moves and cooking creations to reading strategies and high school planning tools, summer at Springer is full of moments that help students explore, connect, and shine - all while keeping their hard-earned skills moving in the right direction.



