Employment and Disability: An Insoluble Barrier?

A generation of unease

An excerpt from Autism in the Work place Untold Stories,Untapped Talent

Jack’s Story:

Throughout my education, where I was placed for that entire period in a comprehensive setting, it is from
hindsight that that having the support mechanisms tailored for your needs is a much easier request compared to what is needed in transition to adulthood. Whether it may be assistance in the classroom or extra time in examination, those provisions change somewhat in employment, but access as an adult is a more daunting prospect. As a 22 year old graduate from university, which sadly still stands as a limited opportunity for many of those diagnosed with a learning disability; the assumption may be I have no exceptional considerations for employers to take into account. I am perfectly mobile and with sufficient communication skills that would not need close monitoring.

However, the process of applying for roles can often become a draining process in itself. For many graduate vacancies, some roles require shortlisted candidates to attend assessment centres and partake as any other 21 person in the various tasks throughout the day. Not only having to travel outside of your home area, you will be thrown into group exercises with complete strangers. For many autistic people, such an idea like this will immediately cancel their potential out of the process, whereas I tried to feel more able in coping with such a
challenge.

What I was most regretful of was when in an assessed interview, I had only 15 minutes to plan a
response to a scenario which would form the basis of a test by interviewers. If I had perhaps spoken up that I
needed more time or found processing new information, as well as responding, in such a short space of time
beyond what I can excel at, than perhaps I may have stood a better chance of success.
Returning back to hindsight, it is easy to recognise now that the jobs market is a hostile feet in comparison to
the care received in education. Being on the mild autistic bracket can make it more difficult to declare what
may look like your ‘limitations’ as opposed to going into an environment where you are equal among the
others, with an equal right for consideration. It is the job of recruiters to emphasise the desire for inclusivity
and how they believe having the skills of someone with a learning disability can benefit an organisation.
Beyond having adjustments or being viewed as ‘high maintenance’, your contributions and talent that are on
offer are greeted with open arms, regardless of the means to make that a success

Across the UK, a disproportionate number of people with learning disabilities are currently in employment,
with just 7% of adults according to the Foundation for People with Learning Disabilities with a full or part time
role. For autistic people, that figure counts as little as 15%. It stands as a scar in society which those with
more disadvantages than most in life, many employers are just not clearly equipped to facilitate the
adjustments of a person with additional needs. More than that though, both teachers and employers are not
sufficiently accounting for the further demands when employment brings a possibility of greater
independence for a young adult just starting life in work, but the many situations attached to that. From
responsible management of wages to finding a work-life balance, the pastoral care of those with learning
disabilities are more serious when they have moved away from home and adapting to a new routine in a
workplace.

From my own experiences, I like to think myself as adaptable and comfortable within a fast-paced work
environment. My typical requests for those that manage me, like not loading excessive tasks when previous
ones are still incomplete or sending work documents in an electronic format so I may be able to process
them in my own time and if working from home feel to me appropriate adjustments which should create a
conducive situation that will benefit all parties in the long term. Equally, it is easy to imagine yourself
burdening what could be an already over-stressed and rushed colleague to support on a personally tailored
level.

Being in work is the principle of pushing yourself further and to bring new skills that advance your workinghttps://www.dropbox.com/s/b36855knq7iq2sx/Screenshot%202015-08-04%2011.37.42.png?dl=0
life, but when it is easy to feel discriminated by employers or faced with prospects of working in both low
skilled and low paid roles, the impression of employers not wanting to expand their diversity of workforce can
only be intensified. In a Masters dissertation from a former school teacher and adult volunteer in projects I
am involved with, her focus on barriers to employment for those with learning disabilities in forms of welfare,
bullying and physical capacity. Action on all sides by government to employers can change this – it is not as
steep to embrace inclusivity as it may seem and when the potential is not undermined by the disabling
factors in disability. An environment which hosts employees from all backgrounds can breakdown those
perceptions which poisons society today. Until then, employers will never know of the real assets brought to
the development of their organisations.

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