United States Navy Rescinds Scholarship to Eagle Scout with 4.9 GPA because of Autism Diagnosis
Description

Tory Ridgeway’s dreams were dashed when the Navy rescinded his scholarship because of his autism diagnosis.

Tory Ridgeway’s dream for the last decade is to serve his country through participating in the military as an aero-space engineer. Tory is an Eagle Scout who graduated from high school this year with a 4.9 GPA.

Tory has an autism diagnois.

Tory was ecstatic to receive a full NROTC Scholarship from the United States Navy. His reaction was caught on video.

Tory’s autism was the focus of his admissions essay.

“He talked about how proud he was of all of his accomplishments as a child of autism,” said his mom, Vanessa Ridgeway.

The NROTC acceptance letter said the scholarship is contingent on several things, including being medically qualified.

Much to Tory and his family’s dismay, two months later the Navy unexpectedly rescinded their scholarship stating Torey’s autism diagnosis as the reason.

“It’s very difficult to just find something else when you’ve spend two-thirds of your life going for something and then right when you have it in your hand, it’s yanked away from you,” said Tory Ridgeway.

Vanessa Ridgeway says she is trying to understand the disconnect. Why they would admit him, knowing his diagnosis, only to reject him in the end.

“Never did we think, ‘oh, they didn’t pay attention to the fact he said he’s a child with autism and he’s overcome this.’ I was devastated, my husband was devastated,” she said.

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University told WUSA9 it is not involved in the NROTC admissions process. Although the program is housed on their campus, the process is solely in the hands of the U.S. Navy.

Tory will still attend Embry-Riddle in the Fall. Because the scholarship has been rescinded he needs help with tuition.

A fundraiser for Tory is here.

You can also contact your United States representatives about discrimination about autism in the military.

Comments
Order by: 
Per page:
 
  • There are no comments yet
Related Feed Entries
By James T. Ellis, PhD, BCBA-D and Christine Almeida, MSEd, EdS, BCBA Image by Chessie Almeida Hi! Hello! Welcome to the Socially Savvy Second Edition! Almost 20 years ago, we (Christine and Jim) decided to develop a social-skills assessment, which eventually became Socially Savvy. At the t…
6 days ago · From Different Roads to Learning
Prefer listening? Try the audio overview of this post by pressing play below. When we think of robots, we usually picture rigid machines on a factory floor. They require exhaustive programming, massive datasets, and perfectly controlled environments to function. If one thing is out of place, …
12 days ago · From Assistive Technology Blog
In a landmark move for the global assistive technology community, the Ministry of Electronics & IT recently unveiled a comprehensive strategy to transform India from a text-heavy digital landscape into a voice-first ecosystem. Launched at the India AI Summit Expo 2026, this initiative is anchore…
28.04.2026 · From Assistive Technology Blog
By Sam Blanco, PhD, LBA, BCBA There’s a famous quote from W. Edwards Deming that says “Without data, you’re just another person with an opinion.” While Deming wasn’t a behavior analyst, this statement aligns closely with how BCBAs approach their work. Most BCBAs will report how much they love …
28.04.2026 · From Different Roads to Learning
Adidas has announced the launch of the Supernova Rise 3 Adaptive, its first performance running shoe specifically designed for athletes with disabilities. Developed over several years, the shoe was inspired by Chris Nikic—the first person with Down syndrome to complete an Ironman—who previously stru…
10.04.2026 · From Assistive Technology Blog
Rate
0 votes
Info
28.06.2021 (28.06.2021)
369 Views
0 Subscribers
Recommend
Tags