Learning and growth is the goal that quietly moves the rest. Every time a skill is learned, the support hours needed for that part of life can shift toward something else. Every time a new interest takes hold, a new community opens up. Growth compounds.
The myth that learning ends at 22 is one of the most damaging assumptions in the system. It does not end. It changes shape, and the funding lines for it are different from school-district funding, but the learning continues.
What adult learning looks like in San Diego County
- San Diego Continuing Education runs free adult-school programs across multiple campuses, including programs explicitly designed for adults with developmental disabilities. Cooking, math, reading, technology, English as a second language, citizenship, vocational training.
- Community colleges — MiraCosta, San Diego City, Mesa, Miramar, Cuyamaca, Grossmont, Palomar, Southwestern — all run Disability Support Services. Mainstream classes with accommodations are an option for many students.
- Department of Rehabilitation (DOR) funded vocational training for skills that lead to work — including computer skills, soft skills, and specific trades.
- Self-Determination Program (SDP) funded tutoring or classes that do not fit into a vendor menu — a private music lesson, a cooking instructor, an adaptive computer-skills coach.
- Library programs across the San Diego County Library system and the City of San Diego library system — book clubs, maker spaces, tech help.
- Specialized programs like the Friendship Circle, A Place Called Home, and inclusive arts programs that combine learning with community.
Skills that matter most for adult life
If your loved one masters even most of these by their late 20s, life gets dramatically easier:
- Communication. Speech, signs, AAC devices, written communication — whatever channel works, used confidently.
- Money basics. Recognizing bills, using a debit card, knowing what something costs, asking for help when something feels wrong.
- Transportation. The bus, the trolley, ride-share, asking a driver for help. Getting somewhere on your own time.
- Cooking and food safety. A few reliable meals, kitchen safety, grocery shopping.
- Phones and technology. Calling for help, texting friends, using a calendar app, navigating GPS.
- Self-advocacy. Saying yes, saying no, asking questions, complaining when something is wrong.
How to fund this
- Department of Rehabilitation (DOR) pays for vocational training, assistive tech, and education that leads to work. Many San Diego families do not realize how broad this can be.
- Regional Center direct services (RDI) day programs that emphasize skill-building can be valuable; ask vendors specifically what they teach and how.
- Supplemental Living Services (SLS) staff can be tasked with skill coaching as part of their daily routine — practicing the bus route, walking through cooking together, working on phone use.
- Self-Determination Program (SDP) is by far the most flexible — you can budget for a tutor, a private instructor, a specific class fee, a one-on-one coach.
What to put in the IPP
“Continue building independent-living and community skills, with at least two specific learning goals named per year.” Then name them — riding the 30 bus from home to the day program, doing weekly grocery shopping with minimal support, mastering a new recipe each month. Specific goals get specific funding.
A small habit that pays off
A weekly “learning hour” — even 30 minutes — built into the schedule, with a familiar staff member or family member, working on one specific skill at a time. Over a year, that is 26 to 50 hours of focused learning. Skills add up that way.