Employers are realizing more and more that there is a group
of potential employees in the autism community who can be productive workers if
given a chance. Chris Simler is the director of career development services at Turning
Pointe Autism Foundation, which has a program that focuses on teaching career
and life skills to individuals preparing to transition to the workplace. He
stresses that "there is no typical job for a person with autism." They can work
in retail, accounting, data entry, and even social work. "I don’t see the
walls," Simler tells the Naperville Sun, "The more we can put people with autism in different places, the more awareness
we can create."
As long as parents or caregivers can help uncover the person’s
strengths and interests, a person with autism can become a very effective
employee. Laurie and Jim Jerue, from Naperville, IL, have a daughter
named Sarah with severe autism. They developed a business out of their home
called Helper Girl, where Sarah, 23, can do tasks such as document shredding
and container planting for local establishments, which she enjoys doing.
As with any job, the key to finding employment for people
with autism is matching their skills and features with job requirements.
Professor Scott Standifer of the University of Missouri’s Disability Policy and
Studies Office explains that businesses that employ individuals with autism
need to also ensure that co-workers understand that person’s unique way of
communicating and also provide support for challenges such as sensory
sensitivity or anxiety issues.
Aspiritech, a nonprofit organization in Highland Park, IL, hires
people with autism to test computer software. They have the ability to catch
irregularities that others would miss. Moshe Weitzberg, director of operations,
says they also have an autism specialist who gives support to workers even
beyond the workplace.
Some employers begin hiring people with disabilities
thinking that they are doing something nice, but they soon realize that these
people make excellent workers. "There’s an untapped pool of potential workers available
in the special needs community," says one Naperville resident whose 19-year-old
son is autistic. "[They] can really do a great job for many employers."
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