A High School for Teens with ADHD in the Bay Area

Different learners deserve a different kind of high school.

'Students with ADHD in small class at Holden High School in Orinda CA'

ADHD isn’t a limitation; it’s a different way of learning. The right environment makes all the difference. Holden High School is a small, relationship-based, therapeutically-informed learning community in Orinda, CA.

Minutes from BART, we serve families across the Bay Area. In our 56th year, we’ve built a school designed for exactly this student: capable teens with ADHD who haven’t found their footing in traditional settings, and who need something genuinely different.

Our 8:1 student-to-teacher ratio, 10am start time, executive functioning support embedded in every class, and a community of diverse learners create the conditions where students with ADHD finally thrive.

WASC-accredited. Rolling admissions. Located in Orinda, Contra Costa County.

Our ADHD Support Team: Learning Specialists

Teens with ADHD need school to be engaging and connected to their interests.
 
At Holden, we deliver complex content through multiple modalities, giving students diverse ways to engage and show what they know.
 
Holden provides scaffolded executive functioning support, helpful accommodations like movement breaks and fidgets, and a unique schedule with interest based electives every day of the week to help students with ADHD thrive.

 

 

Co-Director Abby Tuttle is a credentialed Education Specialist. She holds with a Master’s degree in Special Education, with an emphasis in mild-to-moderate learning disabilities. 

Amy Barrow is Holden’s part-time Learning Specialist. She holds a Mild to Moderate Education Specialist credential.

Together, they train all classroom teachers on ADHD-specific accommodations, differentiated instruction, and executive functioning scaffolding. Our learning support isn’t siloed in one room; it is embedded in every class.

I didn't do well in traditional schools because my ADHD means I learn differently. Holden gave me lots of support to pursue my passion for engineering and science.

Student at Holden High Orinda

"Before Holden, I struggled in crowded public school classrooms with teachers who could not support a student with ADHD. I've grown so much at Holden.

Program Features

How Holden Works for Students with ADHD

We don’t ask ADHD students to adapt to a system that wasn’t built for them. We build the system around how they actually learn.

8:1 Student-Teacher Ratio

At Holden, every teacher knows every student: their strengths, their learning style, and where they need support. With a maximum of eight students per class, teachers can pivot, reteach, and scaffold as needed. There’s space to ask questions, clarify directions, and stay engaged.

ADHD isn’t just about attention — it’s about planning, starting, sequencing, and finishing. Study skills and executive functioning development are integrated into the school day.  From structured planning time to flexible deadlines and visual organizers, these supports are integrated into how we teach for each student, not special accommodations.

Research consistently shows that adolescent brains — especially ADHD brains — are not wired for 7:30am productivity. Holden starts at 10am. That one change alone improves attendance, mood, and academic performance for most of our students. It also allows for more commuting time to serve students from all over the Bay Area.

Some students come to Holden full-time. Others start with a part-time schedule, and often build from there. This is especially common for students who are also managing anxiety alongside their ADHD, or who are recovering from school refusal. Your teen doesn’t have to be ready for five full days to begin. Our part-time program serves students in independent or homeschool study programs.

Students can earn high school credit for extracurricular learning: internships, jobs, independent projects, arts programs, and more. Many teens with ADHD demonstrate strengths beyond conventional academic settings. This approach ensures their transcript tells the full story of who they are.

Many teens have spent years feeling like they don’t quite fit — too much, too quiet, too distracted, too different. At Holden, differences aren’t something to manage; they’re something we understand. With many students navigating learning differences, our culture is built around acceptance, flexibility, and respect. We use a research-based social connection curriculum (PEERS), but just as importantly, the community itself creates a strong sense of belonging.

Holden is WASC-accredited — the same accreditation held by most California public and private high schools. Our students go to college. We work with every student on post-high school transition throughout their four years. Counseling, family meetings, grade level Advisories, and college prep electives support students researching and applying to 2yr/4yr college, vocational programs, entry level positions, gap years, and career training.

Serving Students Across the Bay Area

Holden is located at 10 Irwin Way in Orinda, CA — a 5-minute walk from Orinda BART on the Yellow Line. We serve families from across the East Bay and Bay Area, including:

 

About 56% of our families come from Alameda County, 41% from Contra Costa County.

By BART from Oakland or Berkeley, the commute is under 30 minutes.

Is Holden the Right ADHD School for Your Teen?

The students who tend to do best at Holden are capable teens with ADHD who need a physical school — not a 1:1 program, not an online school, not a therapeutic placement — and who are ready to be part of a small community. Specifically:

Holden works well when your teen:

  • Has ADHD, is academically capable but underperforming or disengaging in traditional school
  • Needs a physical school environment with structure, peers, and in-person connection
  • Can engage in  learning for 3–5 days per week
  • Feels like an outsider: LGBTQ+, creative, neurodivergent, or just ‘different’ — and wants a community where that’s accepted, shared, and supported
  • Has experienced school refusal or burnout and has some readiness to try again
  • May also have anxiety, depression, and/or other learning differences in addition to ADHD

Holden may not be the right fit if your teen:

  • Is in active mental health crisis or needs intensive therapeutic intervention before returning to school
  • Requires exclusively 1:1 instruction
  • Needs intensive autism-specific programming (ABA, structured communication support, etc.)
  • Is not yet willing to try — even a little. Parent-only motivation rarely works here.

Not sure if that’s your teen? Call us.

We talk to families every day who aren’t certain, and that conversation is free, takes 15 minutes, and usually answers the question.

Ready to see if we’re the right fit? Click the button above to schedule a call, tour, or visit day.

Tours Monday-Friday; Rolling Admissions & Rolling Tuition Assistance.

We enroll throughout the year, not just in September.

Frequently Asked Questions About ADHD at Holden

How Holden Works for Students with ADHD

What is the application and admissions process?

The process is designed to be simple and easy for families to navigate. It starts with a conversation — a 20-minute admissions call with our team. From there, we’ll invite you and your teen for a 35-45 minute tour of the school. After that, your teen will be invited for a Visit Day so they can experience Holden before deciding. The online application includes a short form, school records, a writing sample, teacher recommendation form (prospective 9th grade applicants only), and learning assessments (if applicable) .

Because we have rolling admissions, there’s no deadline — you can apply any time of year, including mid-semester. The timeline between application submission and admission notification is typically 1–2 weeks, except for prospective 9th graders, whose admissions timeline differs.

Use the button above to call us or reach us via email admissions@holdenhigh.org

Holden serves teenagers who are bright and academically capable but haven’t thrived in traditional school. Most of our students have ADHD, learning differences (including dyslexia, dysgraphia, and dyscalculia), anxiety, or depression. Many identify as LGBTQ+ (about 38% of our community) and many are neurodivergent in ways that made them feel like outsiders in mainstream settings.

What they share is a desire for a community where they belong and a school that works for their brain.

Yes — and it’s built into our 10am-start school day, not treated as a special accommodation families have to request.

Our embedded study skills and executive functioning support include: teacher scaffolding, flexible deadline structures, and weekly check-ins to address the planning, organizing, EF tutoring/electives, and task-initiation challenges that are central to ADHD.

Our two credentialed Learning Specialists  train all classroom teachers on ADHD-specific strategies and coach students in self-advocacy.

Yes — and it’s built into our 10am-start school day, not treated as a special accommodation families have to request.

Our embedded study skills and executive functioning support include: teacher scaffolding, flexible deadline structures, and weekly check-ins to address the planning, organizing, EF tutoring/electives, and task-initiation challenges that are central to ADHD.

Our two credentialed Learning Specialists  train all classroom teachers on ADHD-specific strategies and coach students in self-advocacy.

Yes. Our therapeutic support is built into the school week, not an add-on. Every student participates in either a weekly 50-minute one-on-one counseling session with a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist or supervised MFT Associate, or in a weekly therapeutic group led by our Clinical Director.

Holden also offers family therapy, a parent support group, and coordination with outside therapists and psychiatrists when needed.

Holden is not a therapeutic day school or residential program — we’re a trauma-informed, strengths-based learning community where counseling, relationships, and academics work together to support students’ growth. If a student is in active mental health crisis, we will help families think through the level of care and support that may be needed. Stop-outs are available for short term student crises.

Our students travel from across the East Bay and Bay Area. About half of families come from Alameda County (Oakland, Berkeley, Albany, Alameda, El Cerrito, Richmond) and half from Contra Costa County (Walnut Creek, Lafayette, Moraga, Danville, Orinda, Pleasant Hill, Concord, Antioch). We also have students from San Francisco and Marin. Holden is a 15-minute walk from Orinda BART, making the commute manageable from most Bay Area locations.

Yes. Holden is fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) — the same accreditation held by most California public and private high schools and colleges. Credits transfer fully, and Holden students apply to, and attend four-year universities, community colleges, and vocational programs.

Yes. Co-Director Abby Tuttle is a credentialed Education Specialist with a Master’s degree in Special Education (emphasis: mild-to-moderate learning disabilities). Holden also has an additional part-time Learning Specialist.

Together they train all teaching staff on ADHD accommodations, learning difference support, and differentiated instruction.

Yes, and we encourage it. Holden operates as a small, relationship-based, therapeutically-informed learning community — we consider ourselves a complement to outside mental health care, not a replacement. Our on-site counselors handle school-based support, parent communication, offer family therapy and parent support and coordination with outside providers. We’re happy to schedule coordination calls with your teen’s therapist or psychiatrist. 

Yes to both. Holden has rolling admissions and accepts students throughout the year — not just in September. We also offer flexible enrollment: many students start two or three days a week and build up gradually, which is especially common for students who are managing anxiety alongside ADHD or recovering from school refusal.

Yes. We welcome students with IEPs and 504 plans, and we actively support them from day one.

We start by listening — to students, families, teachers, and any existing documentation. From there, we put the right accommodations and modifications in place, and we differentiate instruction so the learning environment fits the student, not the other way around. Our 8:1 ratio means teachers know every student’s learning profile and can adapt in real time.

Every Holden student has access to advisory groups, homework labs, learning specialist and teacher office hours, individual and family counseling, study skills support, end-of-semester conferences, and academic support meetings — all included in tuition. Additional one-on-one tutoring is also available for an extra fee for families who want it.

Students with active IEPs:

Holden participates in IEP meetings — on-site or remotely — with your home district’s staff. We also hold end of year conferences with every student and family to review progress, strengths, and goals. These aren’t formal IEP meetings, but they serve the same spirit: making sure every student is seen, supported, and making progress on their goals.

Holden is not a certified NPS, but we have a track record of working with school districts — and we know how that process works.

Some districts have placed students with us directly. More often, families with documented disabilities are reimbursed by their home district for private school tuition. It’s not a simple process, but it’s more possible than many families realize. Districts that have provided financial support to Holden families in recent years include Berkeley Unified, Oakland Unified, Acalanes Union, John Swett, and Mt Diablo Unified.

If you’re exploring this route, reach out. We’re happy to share what we’ve seen work for families in your district.

Full tuition at Holden High School is $46,904 per yearProviding tuition assistance is an essential part of our school community and mission. Each year, we work hard to make Holden accessible to as many students as possible. 

About 55% of our families receive some form of tuition assistance, supported through school resources and generous community donations. Families who receive aid most commonly pay between $18,000 and $35,000 per year, depending on their financial circumstances. In some cases, families pay as little as $13,000, though this represents less typical situations.

Providing tuition assistance is extremely important to us. It allows students who truly need a school like Holden to enroll, regardless of their family’s financial background, and helps us maintain the diverse, supportive community that makes the school so special.

We also want to be transparent about how our program works. In general, our tuition assistance model works best for families who are able to contribute at least $13,000-$20,000 per year toward tuition. If your household income falls significantly below that range, we encourage you to reach out early so we can have an honest conversation about what may be possible.

Because every family’s financial situation is unique, tuition assistance awards are determined after we review a family’s application and supporting financial documents. Tuition can be paid annually, semi-annually, or through monthly payment plans.

If Holden feels like it could be the right fit for your teen, we encourage you to reach out. We’re always happy to talk through both the admissions process and tuition assistance options.

District funding:

Some families also explore reimbursement through their school district, particularly for students with documented disabilities or IEPs. This path requires persistence and isn’t guaranteed, but it’s navigable — see the NPS question above, or call us to talk through what it’s looked like for families in your district.

→Visit our Tuition Page for full details, or call us. We’d rather have a real conversation than have you guess.

Holden serves students in grades 9 through 12. Some students join us mid–high school (often in 10th or 11th grade) after realizing their previous school wasn’t the right fit, and our rolling admissions process allows us to accommodate transfers at any point during the school year.

Teen sleep cycles naturally shift later during adolescence, and lack of sleep can make attention, impulse control, and emotional regulation even harder for students with ADHD.

Holden’s 10:00 a.m. start time reflects what we know about how teens learn best — and it also allows students from across the Bay Area to commute by BART without a 06:00 alarm.

Teen sleep cycles naturally shift later during adolescence, and lack of sleep can make attention, impulse control, and emotional regulation even harder for students with ADHD.

Holden’s 10:00 a.m. start time reflects what we know about how teens learn best — and it also allows students from across the Bay Area to commute by BART without a 06:00 alarm.

Absolutely — and we encourage it. The best way to know if Holden is right for your teen is to visit. Tours are offered Monday through Friday and are about 45 minutes long. You’ll meet staff, see classes in session, and have every question answered.

Call (925) 254-0199, email admissions@holdenhigh.org, or use the button below to schedule a conversation, tour, or visit day.

How Holden Compares to A Traditional High School

“Attending Holden made me feel smart again. I didn’t think I could do school, but next fall I’m attending San Francisco State.”

I didn’t think I would graduate high school until I came to Holden. I have been supported, gained a lot more confidence, and made a lot of friends.

Schedule A Tour or Ask A Question

We talk to families everyday who aren’t sure if Holden is the right fit. That conversation is free, takes about 15 minutes, and usually answers the question.

We look forward to hearing from you! You can email us directly with inquiries at admissions@holdenhigh.org

Why Students Love Holden!

changing lives since 1969