Mount Prospect Academy offers an array of intensive residential treatment services at multiple locations throughout New Hampshire. We provide treatment and education that’s tailored to the individual, enabling students to successfully return to their home or alternative living arrangements.
Through our residential treatment services, students can learn a variety of competencies which foster character development, promote positive social relationships, and improve overall functioning in society. Our residential services include, but are not limited to: academic support, clinical treatment, after-care support, wellness initiatives, and family assistance.
MPA serves adolescent males ages of 11 to 21, and females ages 11-20. Residential students are enrolled in MPA’s academic program.
Please choose from a program below for more information:
ENHANCED RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT PROGRAM; CAMPTON, NH
Mount Prospect Academy’s Enhanced Residential Treatment Program (ERT) is designed for students who struggle to regulate their own behavior and require significant supports within the residential, academic and community settings. The ERT program maintains an enhanced faculty-to-student ratio of 1:2, which provides the additional assistance needed to increase students’ skill building and competency development.
ERT is composed of four separate communities that accommodates up to 20 students in total. The communities are located at MPA at Campton, in Campton, N.H.
STEP PROGRAM: CAMPTON, NH
Mount Prospect Academy’s STEP Program is located in Campton, New Hampshire. MPA STEP at Campton is currently able to accommodate 4 students. The program will provide short-term treatment, a 30-day period – and in situations where a safe, stable environment is required for permanency reasons, extensions for up to 30 additional days will be considered, if approved.
During this time, students will receive mental health and/ or behavioral treatment individual and group therapy, continued educational services as well as a comprehensive, holistic assessment to review of the impact of trauma on the adolescent.
COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT AND SHORT TERM TREATMENT (CAST); PLYMOUTH, NH
Our Comprehensive Assessment & Short-term Treatment (CAST) program was founded with the philosophy that all adolescent residential treatment should be considered a respite. It is a chance for the family and other stakeholders to catch their breath, and then evaluate what is working and what is not. From this point of reflection, we develop a plan of care that can enable the adolescent to succeed in the least restrictive, community-based setting that is possible.
CAST thoroughly evaluates a student’s strengths and needs during a 60-to 90-day residential placement. The program serves adolescent males who range from 11 to 19 years old. CAST assessments rely on psychological testing and extensive clinical interviewing with students, their families, and their collateral contacts. This enables our clinical team to form connections with students and then present findings in a developmental, bio-psycho-social, and holistic framework. The CAST clinical team will develop individual treatment plans for students and deliver clinical mental health treatment, which includes crisis intervention that is based on the student’s needs.
MPA AT RUMNEY; PROBLEM SEXUAL BEHAVIOR WITH A TRAUMA INFORMED TREATMENT LENS RUMNEY, NH
Mount Prospect Academy at Rumney focuses on helping students mitigate problematic sexual behavior. The program also helps students overcome non-sexual criminal behavior and thinking.
Students at MPA at Rumney receive more supervision and treatment than a traditional residential service. Our 16-bed program adolescent residential program maintains a 1:3 caregiver-to-student ratio. Each student is assigned to a master’s-level clinician who takes responsibility for managing treatment.
Mount Prospect Academy’s comprehensive assessment approach supports the development of quality, individualized treatment plans, and we effectively measure treatment outcomes on a personalized basis. The program focuses on addressing problematic sexual behavior, mental health, substance abuse, and maladaptive behaviors. We also identify students’ dynamic risk factors associated risk of re-offending.
ADVENTURE BASED TREATMENT; WARREN, NH
Mount Prospect Academy’s Adventure Based Trauma Informed Treatment program’s core treatment strategy is Adventure Therapy. MPA at Warren implements an action-centered treatment philosophy that uses activities including but not limited to: participating in a challenging ropes course, rock climbing, backpacking, biking, and paddling.
MPA AT HAMPTON: CAST, ERT, SHELTER-CARE; HAMPTON, NH
MPA at Hampton, located in the beautiful seacoast region of New Hampshire, serves 18 girls ages 11-20. MPA at Hampton offers three programs in one large, newly renovated home; CAST, ERT and Shelter Care. Because Mount Prospect Academy puts its students first, MPA recently opened Squamscott River Academy (SRA); a NH-DOE approved Non-Public School and Special Education Program located in Hampton, NH. Please visit SRA under our Academic link.
MPA AT PIKE: SUB-ACUTE & HALL FARM
Located in the southwest edge of the White Mountains, Mount Prospect Academy’s Sub-Acute program offers highly supportive, structured, residential treatment for students who have struggled in standard residential treatment programs. MPA’s Sub-Acute students have, in most cases, experienced multiple traumatic events. They have unique needs and challenges which require carefully planned, long-term treatment. The Sub-Acute program is designed to prioritize safety and supervision while maintaining a calming, low-stimulation environment.
Hall Farm: Hall Farm serves adolescents and young adults, ages 11- 20, who exhibit significant negative behaviors attributable to co-occurring mental health conditions, trauma, and neurobehavioral challenges including Pervasive Developmental Disorders (Autism, Asperger’s Syndrome, PDD-NOS), Attention Deficit- Hyperactivity Disorder, Nonverbal Learning Disorder, Auditory Processing Disorder, Expressive language disorder or mild intellectual disability. Due to negative and at times aggressive behaviors, these students have struggled to find success in traditional school systems and/ or other day and residential treatment environments resulting in attachment disruption.