NHA Still Accepting Applications for 2025-26

NHA Still Accepting Applications for 2025-26

New Horizons Academy (NHA) still has openings for students for the 2025-2026 school year! NHA is finalizing its 2025-2026 student enrollment at all three of its locations, so please get your applications in TODAY!

Currently, NHA serves special education students from over 25 different school districts from across nine Northwest Ohio counties through its regional special education PK-12 school campus at 220 Lawrence Ave. in Wauseon, its Greater Toledo Area Campus at 6201 Trust Dr. in Holland—just off of Airport Highway, and its Career Center and Special Grounds Coffee Shop at 854 S. Shoop Ave. in Wauseon. If you are looking for the right special education placement for your preschool to high school student, a place where your child feels like he or she fits in, consider NHA.

NHA’s Wauseon & Springfield Township Campuses:

  • NEW—Accept Autism Education Plans (AEPs), based upon a medical diagnosis of autism
  • Are regional preschool to 12th grade special education schools
  • Have a 1:2—staff to student ratio
  • Specialize in individualized, personalized education
  • Provide strong academics, community involvement, life skills classes, and vocational training
  • Offer early intervention, (EI) conductive education (CE), sensory integration, occupational therapy (OT) & speech/language pathology (SLP)
  • Participate in the College Credit Plus (CCP) Program
  • Are Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA) Schools
  • With individual education plans (IEPs), accept both the Autism & Jon Peterson Scholarships as payment in full.

NHA’s Career Center & Special Grounds Coffee Shop:

  • Prides itself on small classroom sizes (5-8 students)
  • Works with young adults up to age 21
  • Targets functional academics, vocational skills training, and work study placements
  • Provides on-site work study placements through its Special Grounds Coffee Shop including kitchen and food prep, coffee bean flavoring and packaging, counter and customer service work, and maintenance and cleaning
  • Helps transition high school students and special needs young adults into community work study programs
  • Provides job coaching and transportation to community work sites
  • Community work site partners include Ace Hardware, Chief Supermarkets, Triangular Processing, Mahnke Orchards & Lily Creek Farms, Goodwill, Together We Can Make a Difference, Lott Industries, Culver’s, the Toledo Lucas County Public Library, and many others.

Our mission is to help your child achieve the greatest independence possible through early intervention programs, classes, community activities, life skills training, vocational placements, and job coaching.

Steps to Enrollment:

  1. Call the school at 419-335-7272 for more information.
  2. Submit a copy of your child’s IEP or AEP & ETR for review.
  3. Schedule a school tour, interview, and student assessment.
  4. If accepted, complete student enrollment paperwork, and provide proof of residency.
  5. Complete and accept the Autism or Jon Peterson Scholarship.

For more information on New Horizons Academy or to schedule a tour, contact Admissions Coordinator Ronda Rupp at 419-335-7272 or via email at rondar@sarasgarden.org.

Congratulations 2025 Graduates!

Congratulations 2025 Graduates!

New Horizons Academy (NHA) is pleased and proud to announce the members of its 2025 graduating class!

On May 18, nine NHA graduates celebrated their high school accomplishments at NHA’s 2025 graduation ceremony where they received their high school diplomas, certificates, and graduation seals.  

This year was extra special as six of the nine graduates were from our Springfield Campus.

The Class of 2025 included:

  • Cahill Anspaugh
  • Joseph (Gabe) Carter
  • Cierra Flores
  • Bryce Hammond
  • Gavin Leal
  • Richard (Ricky) Murphy
  • Cooper O’Neal
  • Justin (JT) Tanksley
  • Lee Yockey

“We were so excited to celebrate this big day with our graduates and their families,” shared NHA Principal Marty Friess. “Graduation is one of my favorite school events, because we get to celebrate the hard work and accomplishments of our students, as well as, thank their parents for their dedication, commitment, and trust in us…sharing their children with us and letting us help them to grow, succeed, and graduate.  I hope everyone enjoyed this year’s 2025 graduation ceremony.”
 
Congratulations to our 2025 graduates!  

Inaugural A.R.N.I.E. Award Winner

Inaugural A.R.N.I.E. Award Winner

It is so hard to believe that the school year is already over. As we reach the end of the 2024-25 school year, we reflect on both the joys and struggles of the past year.

One sorrow that will remain with us forever was the sudden and unexpected loss of Arnie. Arnie meant so much to so many of us. He was an instrumental part of the entire Sara’s Garden organization, from the hyperbaric center to the school and coffee shop.

To honor Arnie’s devotion and embodiment of the mission of Sara’s Garden, we have established an annual “A.R.N.I.E. Award” for one NHA student who exhibits traits that made Arnie so special.

A = Above & Beyond: Exceeding expectations or going further than what is required or anticipated in a given situation. Putting forth exceptional effort, performance, or commitment that surpasses standard duties or obligations. Doing what needs to be done without being asked.
R = Respectful: Showing consideration, courtesy, or regard for others. It involves treating people with dignity, listening attentively, and behaving in a way that acknowledges their worth or opinion even if you disagree with them.
N = Neighborly: Exhibiting friendly, helpful, or kind behavior typical of a good neighbor. It involves being considerate, cooperative, or supportive in a way that fosters a sense of community or mutual care.
I = Inspirational: Motivating a person to feel hopeful, encouraged, or driven to take positive action or pursue a goal. Uplifting others through our words or actions that spark a desire to improve or achieve something meaningful.
E = Empathetic: Having the ability to understand and share the feelings of another student or staff member. An empathetic person can sense what someone else is going through emotionally and respond with compassion and care.

Each campus nominated students from freshmen (9th grade) to 22+ that they believed exhibit these characteristics.

At this year’s graduation ceremony we announced that the winner of the first annual “A.R.N.I.E. Award” is Cahill Anspaugh from our Springfield campus! Cahill received numerous heartfelt staff nominations, all reiterating the pleasure of working with him since he started at NHA in 2021. We have watched Cahill grow in so many ways and are so proud of his evolution into a confident young adult.

Congratulations Cahill!

A plaque containing the names and campus of each year’s winner will be displayed in the SG lobby with a framed picture of Arnie accompanying it.

Support Carrie Williams

Support Carrie Williams

Carrie Williams, or as many people call her, “Aunt Carrie,” is 48 years old. She is an out-going, amazingly thoughtful, hard-working woman. She previously worked at a nursing home as a nurse’s assistant where she cared for and spoiled the residents. Carrie is always putting others before herself. She often goes shopping for bargains and ends up with items for food banks, homeless shelters, nursing home residents, and her friends’ children. She loves music and going to concerts, and she is always looking for new places to travel to. She did not stop moving. That is, until February 15th, 2024, when Carrie did not show up for work. After several unanswered phone calls, a wellness check was ordered.

Carrie had suffered a major hemorrhagic stroke while getting ready for work. Unfortunately, she was not found until approximately 15 hours after the stroke occurred. The stroke affected the right (dominant) side of her body, as well as, causing aphasia. She has a hard time finding the words she wants to say and has difficulty reading. Being a very social person, this is rather frustrating for her.

Although she has made significant progress compared to where she started, she strives to keep improving. She can walk with the aid of a walker. However, her right side is still very weak. She is unable to use her right arm which impedes her ability to even dress herself. She wants so badly to get her life back and often says as much. She has always been independent and took pride in taking care of herself and anyone else who came into her life. She currently resides in a nursing care facility, very similar to the one she previously worked in. Her goal is to become as independent as possible and move out of the nursing home.

We have recently discovered Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) and believe this treatment could be crucial for Carrie’s healing process. In many cases, HBOT has improved the client’s fine and gross motor skills, thinking (cognition) and physical healing. We’ve recently learned that there is a facility right here in Northwest Ohio that we can go to called Sara’s Garden.

Unfortunately, in the United States insurance companies do not recognize HBOT as being therapeutic for the treatment of stroke and traumatic brain injuries and therefore will not cover the cost for treatments. That is why we could really use your help. HBOT for Carrie is only $100 per treatment at Sara’s Garden. However, since our plan is for her to receive at least 40 HBOT treatments that cost adds up quickly.

If you could assist Carrie with the cost (or even just part of the cost) of a single $100 HBOT treatment it would help reduce her overall expenses greatly. 100% of the funds received go into an account in Carrie’s name and will be used for her treatments. Any contribution made would be considered a tax-deductible donation as Sara’s Garden is a 501(c)(3) non-profit facility. Checks can be made out to Sara’s Garden with Carrie’s name on a sheet of paper accompanying the check. Please do NOT write her name directly on the check. You can also donate online via credit card by clicking on the DONATE NOW button below.

We believe this to be a great next step in Carrie’s healing process. Please consider helping Carrie. She has helped so many others in the past, it would be so wonderful to have the same happen for her. Thank you!

Friends and family of Carrie Williams

Sara’s Garden is a 501(c)(3) organization. Your charitable contribution is tax deductible under 501(c)(3) of the IRS code, to the extent allowed by law. A receipt will be sent to you after your pledge has been received to use for tax purposes.

Support Malakai Rodriguez

Support Malakai Rodriguez

Malakai was born February 7, 2021 in Napoleon, Ohio. After he was born, we learned that he was missing his left ear and ear canal. Because of this issue, he would fail the hearing tests in that ear. He was released from the hospital, and we would begin our hearing aid journey later when he was six months old.

After multiple trips to the ENT and audiologist, Malakai was given a bone conduction hearing aid. We began working on using it and he tolerated it for short periods of time. Malakai began attending therapy sessions at a very young age; occupational therapy to help with his fine motor skills, physical therapy for his gross motor skills, primarily to help him learn to walk, and speech therapy to help him develop his communication skills.

He has made great progress and continues to say new words every day. However, as Malakai grew older it became apparent that he was still not meeting his developmental milestones. When Malakai was two years old, he received a diagnosis of Autism.

When it came time to enroll Malakai in preschool, I knew I had to find a school for him that would help him thrive in all aspects of his life. I began to research New Horizons Academy at Sara’s Garden as an alternative school for Malakai. I knew that Sara’s Garden and New Horizons Academy would be the best option for my child. Since the beginning of his time in school at NHA Malakai has thrived. We are thrilled at the academic, physical and behavioral development we have seen take place with him. It has helped his progress so much.

Summers are hard on children with Autism. They struggle with the long break away from school and the daily routine that helps them find success. With summer now approaching, I hope for him to attend the summer intervention program at Sara’s Garden, so he does not regress in any skills and continues to have his same routine. The summer intervention services at Sara’s Garden are only $40 per hour. However, since Malakai will receive 32 hours of intervention services that cost adds up quickly.

I would like to enroll Malakai in two day a week summer camp this year for intervention services, but we could really use your help. Therapy services through this summer program will cost $1,280.00. This month-long camp experience is tailored to Malakai’s needs and not only helps him to work towards increased independence, it also keeps the regression of skills that typically occurs over the summer months at bay.

If you could assist us with the cost (or even just part of the cost) of a single $40 hour of intervention services, it would help reduce our overall expenses greatly. 100% of the funds received go into an account in Malakai’s name and will be used for his treatments. Any contribution made would be considered a tax-deductible donation as Sara’s Garden is a 501(c)(3) non-profit facility. Checks can be made out to Sara’s Garden with Malakai’s name on a sheet of paper accompanying the check. Please do NOT write his name directly on the check. You can also donate online via credit card by clicking on the DONATE NOW button below.

Thank you for supporting Malakai and our family. We will never truly be able to thank you for this gift to our son.

Alexa Hall

Sara’s Garden is a 501(c)(3) organization. Your charitable contribution is tax deductible under 501(c)(3) of the IRS code, to the extent allowed by law. A receipt will be sent to you after your pledge has been received to use for tax purposes.

What Happens When Meds Don’t Work?

What Happens When Meds Don’t Work?

As a young adult, Jolie enjoyed a busy and active lifestyle. She was working full-time and attending school part-time to be a medical secretary. She and her husband had just purchased their first home and spent all their extra time cleaning and renovating the house, mowing the lawn, planting flowers and having friends and family over for gatherings. She also enjoyed cooking, baking and going on long nature walks. That all changed when she was 24 years old, and her world was turned upside down.

Jolie would suddenly become too dizzy to walk without holding on to something to stabilize her. She lost all her stamina and struggled to walk more than 10 minutes without getting fatigued. She reached a point where she could no longer garden or do yard work. Simple tasks, such as shopping for groceries, would drain her energy for an entire day. Even driving a car for more than a few minutes would completely exhaust her. As her condition continued to deteriorate, Jolie and her husband were forced to sell their home when it became too unsafe for her to navigate stairs without falling.

Jolie was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS), an incurable, autoimmune disease that impacts the central nervous system, including the brain and spinal cord. “Sclerosis” refers to scarring of the white matter of the brain and spinal cord. In the case of MS, the immune system, our body’s defense mechanism, mistakenly targets myelin cells, the protective coverings of the brain and spinal cord nerves. This damage to the myelin sheath disrupts the transmission of messages or signals that nerves send across the body, affecting crucial functions such as vision, sensation, and movement.

MS usually strikes young adults like Jolie. Over time, it can render a person unable to write, speak and walk. According to a 2019 study funded by the National MS Society, around 1 million people in the United States have been diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. That number is more than twice what was found in previous studies. Unfortunately, scientists still don’t know the root cause of this disease. However, over the past two decades, extensive international medical research has demonstrated that Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) can play an extremely important role in the treatment of MS. In many European countries, HBOT is now considered an integral part of the MS treatment program, and doctors are recommending it as part of their patients’ care plans.

Unfortunately, the American medical community has been slow to accept HBOT as an alternative therapy for Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Treatment regimens continue to focus on the use of medications and corticosteroids to reduce nerve inflammation, limit the frequency and severity of clinical attacks, slow disability progression and reduce brain and spinal cord lesions. As with any drug therapy, those that are used to treat MS come with a range of potential side effects, ranging from mild irritation at an injection site to potentially serious complications, like liver damage or severe infections.

However, there is scientific evidence to suggest that oxygen treatment does have beneficial effects for MS sufferers. Many MS people report improvements in their overall symptoms and their functional ability. Patients have reported improvements with their ataxia, numbness in their fingers and hands, balance, visual fields, concentration, pain, weakness, and dizziness. Ideally, Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy treatments should be initiated as soon as the condition is diagnosed, and before irreversible lesions have become established. This does not mean that patients whose diagnosis was determined more than five years ago will not benefit.

Oxygen is essential to all body tissues, particularly injured ones that require oxygen to heal. Extra oxygenation through HBOT is proven to accelerate the healing process and reduce inflammation. Inflammation in the central nervous system is a signature characteristic of MS, which is one of the reasons why HBOT can slow the progression of the illness. HBOT is also known to boost energy, promote faster recovery from fatigue, reduce pain, and improve concentration and mental clarity, thus alleviating many of the symptoms of MS.

Jolie’s MS treatment journey began like most others in the U.S. with medications. She was placed on numerous drugs for her fatigue and dizziness. None of which worked. She went to physical therapy, but they simply focused on helping her learn how to economize her movements and work at a slow, steady pace. The goal here was only to help manage household tasks and take care of her family. Returning to work and school was impossible.

Jolie learned about HBOT at Sara’s Garden by sheer coincidence. Her daughter had just been diagnosed with Autism and she was looking for a school that specialized in this condition where she could learn, cope, grow and thrive. While touring the school, staff noticed that she was struggling to walk and asked if she was ok. After hearing about her condition, staff informed her about the success Sara’s Garden had in treating individuals who suffer from MS through Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy. She scheduled a tour of the hyperbaric center the very next day. Feeling she needed to do whatever she could to take care of her health and her family, she decided to give it a try. To this day, Jolie claims it was the best decision she has ever made.

By the end of the second week of treatments, Jolie began noticing significant improvements in her symptoms. Her dizziness had faded away and her energy levels had increased. Driving was no longer exhausting, and she was able to start taking walks again. Jolie was able to start playing with her children again and even started taking college classes again to complete her degree. Her family said that it was like having the old Jolie back again.

Jolie has said, “The beautiful thing about Sara’s Garden isn’t that it’s faith-based, though that helps, nor that it is a medical treatment that doesn’t pump you full of chemicals. The most beautiful thing – the greatest thing – about Sara’s Garden is that it is a community of people who have hope in miracles, who care about not just you, but anyone who is suffering and needs the kind of help they can give. It is a place where people can connect, uplift, encourage and relate to one another. It’s a place where the greatest treatment isn’t the oxygen therapy – it’s the encouragement, hope and comradery that you find with the staff and other clients.”

Ever since Jolie’s first visit, she has said the same thing repeatedly, with all her heart to anyone who will listen, “Hope grows at Sara’s Garden!” Thanks to Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy at Sara’s Garden, Jolie has her life back. No matter what you’ve been told, there is hope… for this and many other conditions. HBOT is treatment without drugs… without surgery… without pain.

Grounding our HOPE with GRATITUDE

Grounding our HOPE with GRATITUDE

On Tuesday, December 3, 2024, Sara’s Garden hosted its second Grounding our HOPE with GRATITUDE event. This event was created to share our sincere gratitude for all the support in helping those we serve reach their fullest potential and this year we also celebrated and reflected on 20 years of HOPE, HELP and HEALING. We had over 50 people in attendance and the room was filled with love, laughter and tears.

Those who attended were blessed to hear personal testimonies from past and present Hyperbaric clients, a parent of one of our students and a staff member whose child has been a part of Hyperbaric treatments and Conductive Education therapies. At the end of the event, our NHA Career Center students performed a small piece from their upcoming Christmas program.

We are very blessed to have such a giving and supportive community.

Special thanks to the Hyperbaric clients, NHA students, staff, family, friends, community members & advocates that made this event so special. We also want to thank CIG Financial for the Special Grounds CIG Bull + Bear coffee gifts that each person received.

2025 Handcrafted Hope Sale

2025 Handcrafted Hope Sale

Mark your calendars for our 2nd NHA Handcrafted Hope Sale! Our New Horizons Academy junior and senior high students have been working hard on items made from the burlap coffee bean sacks from Special Grounds Coffee, along with other creative items that they are planning on selling to support this Handcrafted Hope Program.

With March being Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month, we wanted an additional opportunity for our students to display their creative sides through our Handcrafted Hope Program and help them reach their fullest potential .

Event Date:Thursday, March 27, 2025
Event Time:9:00 am – 11:30 am
Event Location:Special Grounds Coffee, Wauseon, OH
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All proceeds from this event go back into the Handcrafted Hope program for the purchase of equipment and materials. Sara’s Garden is a recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and is the only facility in the United States to offer Autism Intervention, Conductive Education, Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Sensory Integration and Speech-Language Pathology services.

What is an Autism Education Plan (AEP)?

What is an Autism Education Plan (AEP)?

What Is an Autism Education Plan (AEP) & How Can It Help My Child Access the Ohio Autism Scholarship?

In the past, all students needed an individual education plan (IEP) to qualify for an Autism Scholarship in Ohio; but for many autistic students, when the public school evaluated them, the school did not feel that the students’ disability was getting in the way of their academic progress and would not give them an IEP…even though the students already had medical or psychological autism diagnoses.

To address these students behavioral, emotional, sensory, vocational, executive functioning, and therapeutic issues, the Ohio Department of Education and Workforce (DEW) developed an Autism Education Plan (AEP), so parents had another way to support their students’ needs.

An AEP is a document that outlines services for a child with autism. It’s used in the Ohio Autism Scholarship Program (ASP) to help families choose private or alternative public service providers. Because AEP’s are so new, many parents and even schools are unfamiliar with them.

If you are looking for additional assistance, through a nonpublic school or private provider, for your autistic child and your home school district does not think your child qualified for an IEP, please consider and ask about an AEP. The qualifying pathway is to the right or you can access it at:

https://education.ohio.gov/Topics/Other-Resources/Scholarships/Autism-Scholarship

Again, since the AEP is so new, many schools are unfamiliar with it, what it includes, and how to write it. For the Autism Scholarship, the home school district needs to complete the AEP, so it can be submitted to the Department of Education and Workforce (DEW) for approval before the scholarship can be approved, finalized, and available for student services.

For families and public schools that need assistance or more information on the AEP. Sample AEP forms are below and may be used as a template. Just remember that the goals and objectives should target non-academic needs and activities such as: behavioral, emotional, sensory, vocational, executive functioning, or therapeutic concerns.

Download AEP Planning Form & Plan (Must be printed on school letterhead)

Student does not have an active lEP including students home educated)

School District understands IDEA requirements provided by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, as amended by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004 (IDEA) at 20 U.S.C. 1400, and related federal regulations at 34 C.F.R. Part 300 (October 13, 2006) and affirms that the school district has satisfied its obligations under IDEA to a student presenting a private diagnosis of autism.

After district affirms it has satisfied requirements under IDEA:

  • If the district determines there is an adverse educational impact due to autism, the district develops an IEP in accordance with IDEA that details appropriate educational and related services
  • The IEP and ETR are submitted to the Autism Scholarship System by the district
  • The provider submits the application and supporting documents
    OR
  • If the district determines there is no disability and no IEP is developed, the district develops an AEP
  • AEP includes one or more services listed on the DEW checklist and any other information the district, at its discretion, wishes to provide
  • AEP is submitted to the Autism Scholarship System by the district
  • The provider submits the application and supporting documents

Twas One CRAZY Night Before Christmas

Twas One CRAZY Night Before Christmas

NHA Certainly Had One Crazy Night Before Christmas for Its Annual Christmas Musical!

Thank you to our wild, crazy, and (at times) mixed up and musical New Horizons Academy (NHA) students and cast members, who delivered wonderful and wacky Christmas performances on December 17 at Pettisville Missionary Church.

This year, NHA Music Teacher Melissa Valentine put together a show we will never forget! What other Christmas musical would include the Ghostbusters and Who Let the Dogs Out?, alongside a living nativity and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer? Why Twas One Crazy Night Before Christmas, of course! According to composers John Jacobson and Mac Huff, “Take a light-hearted look at Christmas in the typical American household. ‘Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not even a…wait a minute!?! What’s going on here – Mom’s running pass plays in the kitchen, Sis is doing her best Martha Stewart imitation, Dad and the Uncles are taking root in front of the TV, and the kids are hmmmm??”

Well, over 100 of our special needs kids sang, danced, played, drummed, and joked to:

  • Christmas Time is Comin’,
  • Sleepin’ on the Floor at Christmas,
  • The Wheels on the Bus Go Round and Round All Christmas Eve,
  • 2024 NHA Starting Line-Up,
  • Who Let the Dogs Out?,
  • Who You Gonna Call? GHOSTBUSTERS!,
  • Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,
  • Will the Real Santa Claus Please Stand Up?,
  • Slippers Again for Christmas,
  • Something to Believe In,
  • Silent Night,
  • Saxophone Solo by David Rose &
  • Guitar Duet by Jack Syverson and Teacher Claire Graber.

If you missed this wild and wacky Christmas show, check out all of the Christmas photos, taken by Hannah Downing of HND Photography, on NHA’s Facebook page or head over to our YouTube channel for your own special, encore performance!