Succeed in School.
College is hard. Executive function challenges make it harder. CLE provides the academic coaching that helps students not just survive school – but thrive in it.
THE CLE APPROACH
Academic Coaching: Building the Systems That Make Success Possible
CLE’s academic support focuses coaching student’s throughout their academic jounrey on is how to be a successful student – the organizational, planning, and self–management skills that college assumes but doesn’t teach.
What academic coaching addresses: Breaking long–term projects into manageable steps. Building study routines that match individual learning styles. Using calendars, reminders, and tracking systems effectively. Communicating with professors and navigating office hours. Accessing campus resources like disability services, tutoring centers, and academic advising. Recovering from setbacks — a failed exam, a missed deadline – without spiraling.
Our coaches understand executive function. They know that “just use a planner” isn’t helpful advice for someone who struggles with task initiation. They know that study strategies designed for neurotypical learners often don’t work. They meet students where they are and build systems that actually stick.
We also coordinate across the academic ecosystem. CLE students attend over 60+ colleges and universities across our eight locations. We work alongside students on when and how to communicate with disability services offices, academic advisors, and professors. Your student has a local team of suppport working alongside them, not just a checklist of advice.
THE CLE APPROACH
Academic Coaching: Building the Systems That Make Success Possible
CLE’s academic support focuses coaching student’s throughout their academic jounrey on is how to be a successful student – the organizational, planning, and self–management skills that college assumes but doesn’t teach.
What academic coaching addresses: Breaking long–term projects into manageable steps. Building study routines that match individual learning styles. Using calendars, reminders, and tracking systems effectively. Communicating with professors and navigating office hours. Accessing campus resources like disability services, tutoring centers, and academic advising. Recovering from setbacks — a failed exam, a missed deadline – without spiraling.
Our coaches understand executive function. They know that “just use a planner” isn’t helpful advice for someone who struggles with task initiation. They know that study strategies designed for neurotypical learners often don’t work. They meet students where they are and build systems that actually stick.
We also coordinate across the academic ecosystem. CLE students attend over 60+ colleges and universities across our eight locations. We work alongside students on when and how to communicate with disability services offices, academic advisors, and professors. Your student has a local team of suppport working alongside them, not just a checklist of advice.
How It Works
How It Works
Classes + CLE Supports Across the Week
What We Work On
Not just a checklist – a deep dive into the skills that matter.
What We Work On
Not just a checklist – a deep dive into the skills that matter.
Real Programs & Groups
GROUPS VARY BASED ON LOCATION AND SEASON.
Real Programs & Groups
GROUPS VARY BASED ON LOCATION AND SEASON.
60+ Institutions. Endless Possibilities.
CLE students attend colleges and universities near our eight locations. We support students whereever they want to go.
Across All Locations
- Community colleges
- State universities
- Private colleges
- Certificate programs
- Trade schools
We Coordinate With
- Disability services offices
- Academic advisors
- Accessibility coordinators
- Professors (when appropriate)
Area Colleges
Student Journey
Student Journey
THE CHALLENGE
The Gap Between Capability and Performance
Many students arrive at college with the intelligence to succeed academically – and still struggle. The issue is rarely comprehension. It’s management.
In high school, structure is built in: bell schedules, teacher reminders, parent oversight, assignments broken into steps. Students may not realize how much of that scaffolding they’ve relied on until it disappears.
College removes it all at once. Professors don’t check if readings are done. No one notices a missed class. A fifteen–week project might be mentioned on the syllabus once and never again until it’s due. For students with executive function challenges – difficulty with planning, prioritization, time estimation, task initiation – this environment can be overwhelming.
The result is a pattern we see repeatedly: a capable student falls behind, feels ashamed, avoids the problem, and spirals. Failed classes. Dropped semesters. Sometimes, leaving college entirely.
This is not a reflection of intelligence. It’s a mismatch between how college is structured and how some brains work.
The good news: executive function skills can be taught. With the right support, students can develop systems that work for their brain — not someone else’s.
THE CHALLENGE
The Gap Between Capability and Performance
Many students arrive at college with the intelligence to succeed academically – and still struggle. The issue is rarely comprehension. It’s management.
In high school, structure is built in: bell schedules, teacher reminders, parent oversight, assignments broken into steps. Students may not realize how much of that scaffolding they’ve relied on until it disappears.
College removes it all at once. Professors don’t check if readings are done. No one notices a missed class. A fifteen–week project might be mentioned on the syllabus once and never again until it’s due. For students with executive function challenges – difficulty with planning, prioritization, time estimation, task initiation – this environment can be overwhelming.
The result is a pattern we see repeatedly: a capable student falls behind, feels ashamed, avoids the problem, and spirals. Failed classes. Dropped semesters. Sometimes, leaving college entirely.
This is not a reflection of intelligence. It’s a mismatch between how college is structured and how some brains work.
The good news: executive function skills can be taught. With the right support, students can develop systems that work for their brain — not someone else’s.
What Families Say
What Families Say
“We’re the guide, not the destination.”
Academic success isn’t about being the smartest student in the room. It’s about knowing how to plan, how to start, and how to keep going when things get hard. That’s what we coach, so the moment comes when they don’t need us, and they’re ready to learn anything.
“We’re the guide, not the destination.”
Academic success isn’t about being the smartest student in the room. It’s about knowing how to plan, how to start, and how to keep going when things get hard. That’s what we coach, so the moment comes when they don’t need us, and they’re ready to learn anything.
Independence is More Than One Pillar
CLE supports the whole person. Explore how it all connects.
Ready to Learn More?
Independence is More Than One Pillar
CLE supports the whole person. Explore how it all connects.
Ready to Learn More?











