Students With Disabilities

How VR New Hampshire serves youth with disabilities.

Image of young man with Down Syndrome with two adult counselors.VR New Hampshire: Connecting with Students with Disabilities

Like all youth, students with disabilities should have the opportunity to explore their interests, discover their strengths, and pursue and achieve their employment aspirations. Through a variety of services and supports, VR New Hampshire helps students with disabilities do exactly that, in close partnership with teachers, parents, guardians, and other adults of influence in their lives.

Examples of services VR can provide to students directly include:

  • Career counseling
  • Guidance on the impact of disability on employment
  • Participation in Individualized Education Plan (IEP) meetings
  • Job search and interview preparation
  • Job placement and retention services (after school hours)
  • Self-advocacy training
  • Information and referral to appropriate community services
  • Guidance on academic choices to support a desired career pathway
  • College planning
  • Consultation on work-based learning opportunities, such as internships and apprenticeships
  • Employment supports, such as job coaching, accommodations, assistive technology, and transportation assistance

We are VR: Connecting with Students Who Have Disabilities

We are VR: Connecting with Students who have Disabilities

This video explains how VR New Hampshire can assist students with disabilities.

We also serve students indirectly, by working with local school districts and individual schools and educators throughout the state to ensure their students with disabilities are positioned to successfully transition from school to college or career. Services include but are not limited to:

  • Career guidance resources and tools
  • State and regional labor-market trends and forecasts
  • Employer contacts and referrals
  • Employment law information
  • Consultation on how a student’s academic programming can align with preparing for employment
  • Information regarding how agreed upon VR services can align with transition goals and services within a student’s IEP

VR New Hampshire’s work with students is guided by both the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA). Learn more by reading our fact sheet about VR New Hampshire’s services for students with disabilities or contacting our Transition Coordinator:

Tina Greco
Transition Coordinator
21 South Fruit Street, Suite 20
Concord, NH 03301
603-271-3993
Betina.M.Greco@doe.nh.gov