• Skip to main content

Southlands Methodist Trust

Research, community, partnerships

  • About
    • About Us
    • News
    • Contact Us
  • Activities
    • Southlands College
    • Supporting Innovative Research and Knowledge Exchange
    • The Susanna Wesley Foundation
    • Southlands Venture
    • Ecumenical Partnerships
    • Educational Partnerships
  • Funding
    • Grants for Roehampton Project Funding
    • Southlands College Scholarships and Bursaries
    • Susanna Wesley Visiting Fellowship
    • Study abroad at Southlands

Supporting neurodiverse students at university

Graphic about project. All text is repeated below image.

Project title:

Exploring how neurodiverse students can be best supported as they transition to university and throughout their degree

[T]his project will… Explore the challenges that neurodiverse students face…and investigate the factors, which may predict successful outcomes in these students.

Researcher:

Dr Carla Startin

School of Psychology

University of Roehampton


Project proposal:

Neurodiverse students such as those with autism or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder may experience greater challenges with transitioning to university and throughout their degree compared to neurotypical students. Challenges that these students face may relate to settling in and developing friendships with peers and/or relationships with staff, or in managing their work and deadlines. These challenges may negatively impact on students’ wellbeing and mental health, as well as impacting on assessment submissions and academic performance. This may then affect students’ ability to progress between years, and their degree completion, overall classification, and graduate outcome. Not providing students with appropriate support may therefore have a critical impact on a personal level, in addition to impacting on key university metrics.

To address these issues this project will use a mixed-methods approach to firstly explore the challenges that neurodiverse students face as they start their degree and as they progress through this, and secondly investigate the factors which may predict successful outcomes in these students. Understanding the challenges these students face and factors that predict student success will inform future strategies and interventions to best support neurodiverse students and their wellbeing, along with improving metrics relating to submissions, continuation, completion, attainment, and progression.

A hand pointing to a laptop screen with another hand on the mouse pad.

Photo by John Schnobrich on Unsplash

Themes:

Enabling transformational change

Encouraging the arts

Seeking justice

Promoting wellbeing

Nurturing rooted communities

Thinking globally

Amplifying voices

Posted on 18th September 2024 by Emma Pavey Filed Under: 2024-2025, Academic Year, Amplifying voices, Discipline, Education, Enabling transformational change, Promoting wellbeing, Psychology, Research Projects, Seeking justice, Theme

Copyright © 2025 · The Southlands Methodist Trust is a charity of the Methodist Church in Britain · Registered charity number 1100660 · Privacy Policy · Log in