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Higher education

Talk to other parents whose children are preparing for university on our Higher Education forum.

Son not allowed to continue to second year at uni

631 replies

PocketSand · 06/08/2025 16:25

DS2 has just completed his first year in an engineering degree. His results are all over the place from 1st in maths to 2:2 to required resits. He exceeded the A level grade requirements for MEng. He is autistic and has ADHD. He was un medicated prior to and during most of his first year due to shortages followed by referral to cardiology.

His DSA support didn't start til the spring term and one support worker provided 1 hour support when 30 hours was approved. He constantly tells the one he has seen that everything is fine and they believe him.

He always says everything is fine and doesn't ask for help. He has never been to the library and relies totally on lecture notes. He doesn't know what independent study is. I have always been his advocate but now he is expected to advocate for himself. No one at the uni knows these issues - he has not even contacted his personal tutor let alone disability services and just thinks he needs to work harder.

He found out today that he has failed his third submission of a lab report he initially submitted in February. He did not have DSA agreed support at that time so he didn’t have his own laptop. He borrowed another student’s at the time but when he had to resubmit no longer had access to his results and so he tried to cobble together a report using specimen (and maybe someone else’s results - not clear). He had previously received an email saying he couldn’t proceed unless he passed resubmission. I assume that’s where we are at now.

His feedback is harsh - shouldn’t study for a degree if not prepared to use feedback to improve his work. Trouble is he often doesn’t understand the feedback and he is unwilling to ask for clarification as he fears tutor’s anger. He says he doesn’t know who marked the work so doesn’t know who to talk to and seems generally clueless about most administrative issues.

I feel completely in the dark and don’t know where to go from here. Obviously I don’t want to just give up and accept his journey ends here as it seems very unfair but don’t know what I can do to try and enable him to fix this or if it can be fixed.

Can anyone who knows the system provide advice on next steps please?

OP posts:
DontWheeshtMe · 07/08/2025 12:38

gavisconismyfriend · 07/08/2025 12:27

I’m not sure why you are pulling apart everything I say. I’ve acknowledged that different universities may work differently. I’m writing from my experience, you are writing from yours. I’m very familiar with the level of support our students are offered by the union when writing their appeals and all I’m doing is reporting that. I’m not negating your experience so please stop negating mine. Our experiences are simply different. Neither are wrong, both are valid.

I appreciate your comment.

I see you are suggesting that relevant adjustments not being in place could be a reason for the appeal.

I agree that’s definitely something worth looking at
However my comment simply states as he’s had three chances already so it seems unlikely
As such it would be wise to include ( also) additional extenuating circumstances based on timings of the failed pieces.

Im trying to support OP and not really focussing on other posters here. I think it’s important she gets as much advice as possible from all angles.

Fetaface · 07/08/2025 12:43

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 11:20

This is incorrect. Formal teaching of social skills was carried out at school with autism support and other therapy. My advocacy was more about meetings with SENCO, LA, medical professionals etc and paperwork involved in EHCP, Tribunal etc. I have always supported him with organisation and revision at GCSE (he got 10 grade 7-9) and A level far more so as a result of his autism and ADHD. I have never stepped in and done things for him - even when he was very young we used behavioural techniques such as backward chaining to teach greater independence.

How come he never knew what independent learning then if you made him do it himself? Surely he should've been doing it at A-level but if he doesn't know then he hasn't done it at A-level.

You said you supported his revision but did you support independent learning? If he has never been to a library nor has a laptop how did you support this?

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 12:44

@SisterMidnight77 You are right. Neither DS2 (or me) are blaming the uni. Even the delay in organising support resulted from DS2's inaction to follow up and take the lead. I am annoyed about the lack of meds and the fact that support sessions were never organised once authorised. I agree that alongside this bad start are ongoing issues with DS2's reluctance to ask for help and take advantage of disability services and the resources available to teach learning skills, plus actively avoiding all contact with academic staff in case they think that he's not good enough!

Ive got him to forward all emails and screenshot info from the portal that I can't access. It seems that feedback following his second submission was presented differently and this threw him. Rather than being handwritten on the report and scanned, it was listed in the text box. DS2 assumed this applied to the checklist rather than the lab report. He was confused and did email the lecturer for the course to specifically ask whether the feedback only related to the checklist but never got a reply. So he just amended the checklist and resubmitted. Hence the person who marked it thinks that feedback was ignored when in fact it was misunderstood and no clarity was provided when requested.

OP posts:
Elleherd · 07/08/2025 12:50

He thinks needing extra support is a sign of weakness and other people will think he is cheating. This is a big issue for them, especially young males.
The same as refusing DLA or PIP, even though disability associated costs drowned and stopped many things. They feel this stuff is emasculating and they ought to be able to manage without it. It's what society tells them. Be a man. Sink or swim. It doesn't tell them what to do if they sink. Or that they are still a man.
Learning how to fail well, and use it, is every bit as important as learning how to succeed.

They've also usually been through the mill of being accused of all sorts because differences and needs weren't understood at school and had their self esteem very battered. At the same time they know they are really smart in some area's, often smarter than the people who have given them a hard time. Making it all make sense and finding balances is very hard.

Your Ds's exam methods are v.similar to what we did for A levels, it's a kind of gaming the system to win, but it sounds like he may have skipped the deeper and wider subject knowledge and understanding than the syllabus he followed, and that being a different part of education, than the learning how to pass exams?

It's why he needs to be in the library immersed in the subject, or in workshops testing stuff out, and needs some passion for the actual subject as well as the need to understand how exactly the assessments work. Otherwise he has to stick with his natural maths gift even if it doesn't interest him much.

I'm self educated, and to me (and what I've taught Ds) university is where the acquisition of deeper wider knowledge, the facilities to test things out and experiment with it, (and make huge mistakes!) and the ability to demonstrate it on demand, come together.

SisterMidnight77 · 07/08/2025 12:54

@PocketSand He sounds VERY much like my son who has just completed his first year in computer science. He always avoids talking to staff, has never used the extra time he's been allocated (he sees it as 'cheating' and 'unfair'), and he takes instructions so literally it's incredible, leading to misunderstandings due to ambiguity, that his poor social skills don't allow him to sort.

Incidentally, I have two 'children' with ASD (and ADHD obvs) but he is by far the most severely affected. He has never ever used the word 'autism'. He tries to muddle on, burying his head in the sand. He barely ever speaks. He tells us NOTHING.

Seriously, if all other avenues are closed then you can appeal, and appeal panels usually side with students. That's my considerable experience anyway (preempting challenges that I don't know what I'm talking about. I do).

istheresomethingishouldsay · 07/08/2025 12:56

Elleherd · 07/08/2025 00:34

I wrote a long post before Ds walked in. About what I had to do to help ASD DS survive and acclimatize and I was an awful lot harder than you in enforcing readiness, through independent study and a love of libraries after he had to be home educated through IGCSE's and A levels, regardless of EHCP's etc.

He wouldn't accept DLA as a child as didn't believe he was disabled.
Everyone else was the problem. These things have consequences so he later had to take a gap year so we could both save for him and he got to mature a bit. But also wasn't prepared to deal with DSA as didn't believe he needed it and didn't want to be labelled or different, and also refused to apply for PIP.
That stubbornness can be the making or breaking of them depending where they focus it.

Ds also could only access uni's living at home. Was very realistic that he could learn independent living, or he could do a degree, but not both at the same time.
Was right but a warning sign about how much each day took out of him.

It took him a 1st year of M.Eng at one uni, and then another 1st year of his second degree course at the same university that I'd enrolled at, (which got him there and back, but usually minus something needed) and huge support from me often on site, before how to navigate and survive, then thrive, finally clicked in properly.
It came only just in time as 2nd year was massively harder and less leeway given. There where still serious meltdowns. That was with some of the more important academic skills already in place. His mental exhaustion levels where scary. Spiky profiles are hard going.

I suspect your Ds has started without enough basic general skills to understand how his course works and utilize what uni offers, and you've assumed DSA will look after him rather more than they will if he isn't seeking them out.
He sounds just not yet be uni ready even with support from DSA, no matter how academically able in some areas he is. It's not a disaster not to be. There's time.

I saw others on both Ds's course, and my own, who really weren't ready or able and didn't manage to engage enough to do more than survive on extension after extension with capped marks, and eventually either accepting a DipHE or
scraped low 2.2's or thirds but without actually acquiring the skills needed to use the education or gain more than very basic NMW work on exit. Refusing to let him continue if he's struggling this badly, may be a kindness in disguise.

I may be wrong, but I know how much home support Ds needed to get him to the point he was able to use uni education and his tutors well.
Your Ds has used a years funding and still has three years of available funding left,enough for a degree still, and is very young. I'd be very careful not to let them potentially get wasted by trying to push him through at this point when he may need it at another.
Wishing you the best, it's not easy whatever you do.

Some (slightly brutal) comments from DS:
Uni support systems aren't there to make the horse drink. They are there to help direct horses complaining about thirst find where the water is.
The library is one of the perks of uni and if you spend three years in it, even if you failed your degree, you wouldn't have wasted your time. There's stuff in there that lecturers don't bother telling you.

If a student isn't requesting and engaging with academic and admin support there's no uni obligation to provide it at all. Tutors aren't generally interested in students who wont help themselves, they've met too many of them.

Parental interference (and that is how uni will see it even with his permission) will only get him so far. A degree is part of showing you can independently function, and seek appropriate support when you can't, and are therefore a useful as well as educated bod, no matter what issues you come with.

M.Eng depts can be the worst for sink or swim attitudes. Personal tutors being distant is normal. Half the dept is ASD and disinterested in communication.
At least one phd student who is further on the spectrum than you is likely to be part of the teaching staff.

Ist yr M.Eng maths is about leveling the maths ability of the cohort especially the gap between maths and further maths students. FM students will 100% coast this module. He's right that it means nothing. (fellow maths brain)

Fluid dynamics is probably the most challenging 1st yr module and a good indicator of subject engagement and ability.
(If similar structure) then material science module is the least maths based module which means if he's leaning heavily on maths ability rather than overall scientific ability this is where it will show up.
M.Eng requires more teamwork and communication than they tell you.

From a holistic marking perspective how you respond to feedback is vital in any uni study. Failing to respond is seen as ignoring tutors. In uni it informs the stages of your coursework, and may be telling you how to answer the question. (Somewhere there may be a frustrated lecturer banging their head on the wall crying why isn't he reading my feedback that would get him the pass?)

If he is hoping to get a further resit on this module and then interrupt to catch up, he needs to resit before end of August to avoid a huge mess with his student finance.

I think @Elleherd 's post and her son's contributions to it are a must read for anyone with an ASD and/or ADHD child heading off to uni, especially in the MEng departments. I have one myself and there are a lot of hard truths and reality checks in there.

RockGirl · 07/08/2025 12:57

I sincerely hope you’re able to secure the support you feel your son needs. That said, it’s important to manage expectations when considering a path through a mathematics degree, followed by a master's and PhD.

This journey is a demanding one and requires far more than subject knowledge alone. It involves developing strong professional communication skills, a capacity for self-reflection, effective team working, the ability to plan and manage independent learning, and a commitment to continually improving performance. It also requires the ability to monitor and adjust one's personal learning trajectory over time.

Initiative and personal responsibility are essential throughout, whether working independently or as part of a team - and often, in a leadership capacity.

For more information about what is expected from accredited mathematics degree programmes, you may wish to refer to the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications (IMA):
https://ima.org.uk/university-degree-programme-accreditation/

University Degree Course Accreditation

Important Notice: Upcoming Changes to Course Accreditation Scheme Changes to the Course Accreditation scheme will be implemented in September 2025.

https://ima.org.uk/university-degree-programme-accreditation/

DontWheeshtMe · 07/08/2025 13:08

OP
Have you seen the feedback from his first submission.

Hiptothisjive · 07/08/2025 13:13

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 08:34

@DontWheeshtMe Thanks for your response. I will ask and find out about options from Disability Support today. I have asked him to authorise communication with me.

@JamesWebbSpaceTelescope Yes it is lab reports that he struggles with in terms of presentation. He wants to work in the automobile industry when qualified.

@Teenytwo DS2 is in denial. He can't believe that a single lab report from February can prevent him from progressing into year 2. He wants to ignore everything and tries to convince hsmself that everything's OK because he has received emails about next years timetable. He wants me to try and sort it.

I will be asking about options to resit the one aspect he failed, repeating the whole year - which I think would be best if he insists on sticking with engineering so that he can restart with support in place and back on his meds - or transferring to a different course.

OP what is it that your son wants to do in automotive?

DontWheeshtMe · 07/08/2025 13:19

Re your last post.
If you read the feedback is it clear once dissected what it relates to.

Lecturers won’t necessarily say
eg
Question 1 needs more of this information
Q2 needs that

Tutors are more likely to offer rounded advice. These are Uni students so are expected to pick apart the advice and go from there

Im a visiting lecturer in Architecture. If I’m criting in an interim crit I don’t tell students what to do. I might suggest an architect or historical reference that might help. I might comment that their work pays no significance to the brief. I don’t tell them the answer.
I don’t tell them the reason it’s not answering the brief is because it pays no significance to the site. That’s for them to work out.
If they’ve done some research and come back to me for clarification then we’ll discuss it further. The best students are the ones that follow through and engage.

I hope that helps whilst you’re going through the lecturers responses

FeelingSoDizzy · 07/08/2025 13:56

I'm sorry you and your DS are facing this. I wanted to say that in my experience it's not always as simple as reaching out to tutors or disability departments.
DS2 has dyslexia and undiagnosed ADHD traits and had an Independent Learning Plan and was eligible for DSA support - some ££ and 30 hours a week of 1to1 support.

I knew he would struggle with all the challenges of uni so (with his agreement) I 'shadowed' him right through application stages and throughout the first year of his course. He gave me access to his e-mail so I could check he wasn't missing crucial stuff, and I helped him draft emails to tutors and the Disability Support team.

The support he received was shockingly bad! His personal tutor either didn't reply, or then cancelled scheduled meetings (mostly still online as 2021/2 and still post-covid). Although he (we) sent everything in on time he also didn't get his first appointment until the spring after he arrived, and then it was such basic, demeaning stuff e.g. 'Have you thought about using coloured post-it notes?'

He was struggling with all the systems and processes for doing things - where to upload things, how to request extensions, how to contact people for help (all queries went through a terrible student support 'black hole' of a portal which nobody seemed to monitor). It was a classic case of 'you don't know what you don't know' and the only way to find out was to wade through pages and pages of online info and documents (which as a dyslexic he found very hard and time consuming). What he needed was someone just to sit next to him and show him (he's a highly visual learner) but in the absence of proper uni support, that person had to me!

At the end of the first term he was in such a tizz that he was threatening to leave, but we muddled through the first year and then he'd got the hang of things. He graduated last year with a first 😃

What people with NT kids don't understand is that it's the executive function stuff that they struggle with - not necessarily the course content itself. And a lot of these neurodiverse students do seem to manage to go on to function absolutely fine in jobs later if they can only get this initial support at uni.

Quellycat · 07/08/2025 14:22

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 10:57

@mcqstar I don't know if my son has elements of ODD but he's always been very stubborn, not in an aggressive way but having very odd reasons why its not necessary to do something or just pretends. I don't know why he was opposed to me buying him a laptop when DSA support was late but I know from experience that if I went ahead and bought one anyway he would refuse to use it! I'm used to things not making sense from my perspective! When he was younger he hated bathing. I used to run the bath for him and then listen for splashing only to peep through the keyhole to see him fully dressed by the side of the bath splashing the water with his hands. This progressed to him standing in the bath so I couldn't see him and wetting his fringe to pretend to have bathed. It was all so complicating and time consuming and caused so much stress that from my perspective it would have been easier to actually have a bath but it was worth it from his perspective.

My NT nieces used to pretend to brush teeth, wetting the brush squeezing out the paste. They conspired together.

Friend’s NT child didn’t change underpants for days (like them warm) and just put clean ones in wash

Another’s NT child refused to use soap, just used really hot water bath/shower to kill germs.

THEY’RE ALL Doing WEIRD STUFF.

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 15:17

DontWheeshtMe · 07/08/2025 13:08

OP
Have you seen the feedback from his first submission.

Yes. Submission 1 and 2 are totally different. He incorporated feedback into submission 2. However there was no feedback written on the report submitted and it wasnt scanned and attached following submission 2. Just 5 points in the text box. As no document was attached it was not clear whether it was feedback on the report or checklist. He emailed his advisor as recommended in email saying 2nd submission had failed, to say he was confused and asked for clarity, attaching the feedback, but received no reply. He said he didn’t know who had marked the work so couldn’t email them to ask. So he amended the checklist and resubmitted the unamended report. Following submission 3 he received an annotated scanned copy of submitted report (2nd and 3rd submissions) which now has 9 points.

Having printed it all off and pored over it for hours I can see that feedback is not always clear and seems to have been written by someone stressed/intolerant eg ‘What is so difficult about checking that your report meets the requirement before (underlined) you submit?’ Lots of underlining and dramatic exclamation points in feedback. This is not what I would consider constructive criticism and posed as a question is very challenging. I imagine that the resulting shame and panic made comprehension of following feedback more difficult.

However it’s clear that he did request clarification after the 2nd submission (I supported him to send the email) but received no reply and had to make his 3rd submission without clarification.

OP posts:
DontWheeshtMe · 07/08/2025 15:27

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 15:17

Yes. Submission 1 and 2 are totally different. He incorporated feedback into submission 2. However there was no feedback written on the report submitted and it wasnt scanned and attached following submission 2. Just 5 points in the text box. As no document was attached it was not clear whether it was feedback on the report or checklist. He emailed his advisor as recommended in email saying 2nd submission had failed, to say he was confused and asked for clarity, attaching the feedback, but received no reply. He said he didn’t know who had marked the work so couldn’t email them to ask. So he amended the checklist and resubmitted the unamended report. Following submission 3 he received an annotated scanned copy of submitted report (2nd and 3rd submissions) which now has 9 points.

Having printed it all off and pored over it for hours I can see that feedback is not always clear and seems to have been written by someone stressed/intolerant eg ‘What is so difficult about checking that your report meets the requirement before (underlined) you submit?’ Lots of underlining and dramatic exclamation points in feedback. This is not what I would consider constructive criticism and posed as a question is very challenging. I imagine that the resulting shame and panic made comprehension of following feedback more difficult.

However it’s clear that he did request clarification after the 2nd submission (I supported him to send the email) but received no reply and had to make his 3rd submission without clarification.

With the best will in the world I would say by the third submission it’s time to really assume everything mentioned wherever it is is relevant.

It’s fine to annotate. Red mark. Exclamations etc
Lecturers don’t pussy foot around students I’m afraid.

Have you had any luck getting hold of the Uni.

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 15:32

I think he also needs support with narrative writing. He seems to have forgotten everything his English Lang/Lit and history 1:1 tutor taught him. His ‘discussion’ shows he has gone back to classic ‘shared minds’ assuming that the reader knows what he does so he doesn’t need to bother even writing in full sentences or explaining the obvious. I can well understand that academic staff would be frustrated by what appears poor effort. I used to teach undergrads when a post grad student and would judge - especially if I was unaware that they were autistic rather than lazy.

OP posts:
PocketSand · 07/08/2025 15:53

@DontWheeshtMeI used to mark 1st year undergrad essays and didn’t pussyfoot either - especially if they were obviously taking the piss and making up quotations or referencing works they had clearly never read.

But I would say that DS2 is a conscientious student and has been trying to do what is expected whilst not really understanding what is expected and foolishly not making best use of support and guidance. And that is down to his profile and past experiences. He needs to do things differently going forward and that means seeking and accepting help and support with learning and presentation skills. Not just working harder doing what has already failed him.

OP posts:
StMarie4me · 07/08/2025 15:57

I would say he might be better on the Apprenticeship route. Has he considered that?

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 16:01

Quellycat · 07/08/2025 14:22

My NT nieces used to pretend to brush teeth, wetting the brush squeezing out the paste. They conspired together.

Friend’s NT child didn’t change underpants for days (like them warm) and just put clean ones in wash

Another’s NT child refused to use soap, just used really hot water bath/shower to kill germs.

THEY’RE ALL Doing WEIRD STUFF.

By younger I mean 14-16. That’s the difference between NT and ND. The behaviour itself is not ‘weird’ for a young child but is age inappropriate for a teenager.

OP posts:
PocketSand · 07/08/2025 16:10

StMarie4me · 07/08/2025 15:57

I would say he might be better on the Apprenticeship route. Has he considered that?

We live in Norfolk so no local employers that offer engineering apprenticeships locally and it does have to be local and accessible by train/bus as DS2 is not able to learn to live independently at the same time. Also the social load of working whilst learning and the competitiveness seemed too much. He is still hoping to do a post grad apprenticeship with someone like Lotus - if he can get through his degree.

OP posts:
Profhilodisaster · 07/08/2025 16:20

@PocketSand I have sent you a DM

Profhilodisaster · 07/08/2025 16:34

He is still hoping to do a post grad apprenticeship with someone like Lotus - if he can get through his degree

I would encourage him not to put all his eggs in one basket

Everyday99 · 07/08/2025 17:32

PocketSand · 07/08/2025 08:07

@AngryBookworm "Ultimately if he can't improve work based on feedback or admit when he needs support, he won't be able to do much with an engineering degree - this may be an incentive for him to challenge himself. (I'm saying all this assuming he can do that - if having someone else advocate for him at all times is an access need, post-secondary education will need to look a bit different)." I've been thinking about this. There was no feedback on the actual report following the second attempt. There is usually a scanned copy of the report with handwritten feedback but this time it was missing. So Im not sure he didn't respond to feedback rather than he didn't receive any about the actual report. The only feedback was in a text box relating to how the supporting document should be structured and submitted as a PDF which he followed. He emailed the main lecturer for the course about this before his final submission but didn't get a response (and still hasn't).

That's odd. Put a massive complaint. Buy him a PC, bribe him to give you access to organise him.

Thaawtsom · 07/08/2025 17:34

Profhilodisaster · 07/08/2025 16:34

He is still hoping to do a post grad apprenticeship with someone like Lotus - if he can get through his degree

I would encourage him not to put all his eggs in one basket

Would agree with this. It feels like he is trying to run before he can walk. Writing well enough and not skipping logic steps and explaining what you are doing is a key skill for an engineer. Yes, extra support might help him with his degree, but being able to ask for and accept that help is also a skill. Getting to where he wants to be may be possible, but on a different timescale. Also, Engineering may not be right for him. None of us can plan our lives out to this degree (apprenticeship with Lotus) and one of the things he needs to manage is uncertainty and adapting when things turn out differently. Good luck OP -- have you managed to get in touch with the disability folk yet (and has your son actually written to them already giving them permission to talk to you?).

Lollylucyclark101 · 07/08/2025 17:48

PocketSand · 06/08/2025 16:25

DS2 has just completed his first year in an engineering degree. His results are all over the place from 1st in maths to 2:2 to required resits. He exceeded the A level grade requirements for MEng. He is autistic and has ADHD. He was un medicated prior to and during most of his first year due to shortages followed by referral to cardiology.

His DSA support didn't start til the spring term and one support worker provided 1 hour support when 30 hours was approved. He constantly tells the one he has seen that everything is fine and they believe him.

He always says everything is fine and doesn't ask for help. He has never been to the library and relies totally on lecture notes. He doesn't know what independent study is. I have always been his advocate but now he is expected to advocate for himself. No one at the uni knows these issues - he has not even contacted his personal tutor let alone disability services and just thinks he needs to work harder.

He found out today that he has failed his third submission of a lab report he initially submitted in February. He did not have DSA agreed support at that time so he didn’t have his own laptop. He borrowed another student’s at the time but when he had to resubmit no longer had access to his results and so he tried to cobble together a report using specimen (and maybe someone else’s results - not clear). He had previously received an email saying he couldn’t proceed unless he passed resubmission. I assume that’s where we are at now.

His feedback is harsh - shouldn’t study for a degree if not prepared to use feedback to improve his work. Trouble is he often doesn’t understand the feedback and he is unwilling to ask for clarification as he fears tutor’s anger. He says he doesn’t know who marked the work so doesn’t know who to talk to and seems generally clueless about most administrative issues.

I feel completely in the dark and don’t know where to go from here. Obviously I don’t want to just give up and accept his journey ends here as it seems very unfair but don’t know what I can do to try and enable him to fix this or if it can be fixed.

Can anyone who knows the system provide advice on next steps please?

What is in his EHCP plan?

Lilywc · 07/08/2025 17:52

He should have been to the Disability Centre in uni , they would have helped him, he would have had extended time to submit his work,
I know you may have wanted him to be independent but this sounds like a severe case & imo he’s been treated unfairly. I went to uni in my 50’s & one day I said that I was getting headaches looking at all the white papers we were given, my tutor recommended I go for a test & when I did it turned out I’m dyslexic, & have Irlans syndrome
I felt so much better knowing the right people were there to help me ,
if he does change uni I would go with him to get him signed up for help then leave him to it ,
I’ve seen students almost have a breakdown with stress
all the best x