Monday, April 30, 2018

Day 30: Thanks

I am grateful for a lot of things this month.
I learned a lot these last three and a half years - from many of you, and from people in the autism at work community. I'd like to thank a few of you:
I once heard an expression, "If you are the smartest person in the room, you're in the wrong room." I assure you that throughout my entire career, through meeting all of you and more, I have been in the right room all along.

Day 29: Acceptance Means

I’m a day late, but I will get this and one more in before the month closes.

To me, acceptance means:
  • We can keep researching autism but not try to 'cure' autistic people
  • Parents don't fear autism but get the early intervention needed
  • Teachers don’t make fun of autistic kids…
  • …so kids don’t make fun of autistic kids…
  • …and kids treat each other better…
  • …and autistic kids go to prom…or whatever they want to do
  • Colleges work hard to recognize and develop their talent
  • Employers tap that talent and develop it and get better managers and employee morale
  • Retail establishments make their places of business autism friendly
  • Neighbors help one another raise the kids in their neighborhood and treat autistic adults well
  • Families help each other
  • And one day, we don’t need Autism Awareness month, because writing a blog post a day is hard work!

: )

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Day 28: Famous Autistic People

I've seen a lot of articles written about famous people who may be autistic, like this one. They're pretty cool, but in some cases they rely on speculation because they say a person long dead was autistic. People have said that about many people in history, including Thomas Jefferson, because of the way they were described by others.

My two favorite famous autistic people are Temple Grandin and John Elder Robison. Both have remarkable and different stories about how they dealt with and learned to embrace their autism. Temple Grandin's mother worked very hard to ensure she got the best care and was able to get through school and go on to college. She's now a famous author and has had a movie written about her life, starring Claire Danes.

John Elder Robison's life was a lot different. He was never diagnosed until much older, long after he quit high school, worked for KISS and Milton Bradley, and made his mark in numerous other ways.

Both Robison and Grandin speak at conferences or have done TED talks that are very inspiring.

Day 27: Meltdowns

I gotta confess, I know very little about this topic except what I have read. Autistic persons are often very sensitive to certain things - lights, noise, smells - even foods and clothing or other tactile issues. As such, the can get very overwhelmed with a lot of sensory input that the rest of us can ignore for the most part.
Here is a video that attempts to simulate what the feeling of sensory overload is like: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lr4_dOorquQ&sns=em
What happens when you get too much sensory overload? Well, think about being tired, irritable, and generally overloaded with a lot of responsibility and you have five kids screaming and running around the house, four cats begging to be fed, a dog that needs to be walked, and a parrot that won't stop squawking. You're doing just fine, but then the smoke alarm goes off because your husband left the oven on and the pizza is burning. At that point, you want to just curl up into a ball because you've pretty much had it. Calgon, take me away!
You just want FIVE MINUTES AWAY from all this and you can't find it. That's a meltdown.
Meltdowns are NOT tantrums. Tantrums are when a child tries to get their way by crying or throwing a fit to see if that behavior will get them what they want. A meltdown is a reaction to overstimulation. The reason I bring that up is because you may see a child having a meltdown in public and confuse it with a tantrum and then give the evil sideye to the parents.
I've never seen a meltdown - not that I know of - But what I have read is that they may strike out or some curl up into a ball. Knowing that the environment you are in could cause a meltdown and watching for the signs of one (increased pacing, perhaps, or started looks and nervousness) can give you a clue that one is coming and you can head it off by giving the person down time.

Final day of Autism At Work Summit 2018

(LtoR: Paul Austin, IBM; Teresa Tatum, EY; Tamara Burks, PWC; Sarah Crump, Freddie Mac)

The last day of the summit started off with a video from NBC about Ford Motor Company’s hiring program. Notable in the video was the pride in the new engineer’s job with the complexity of his work and the relief his mother felt at his son finally being hired with a satisfying job. The NBC announcer concluded with a neat twist on Ford’s motto: “Inclusion is job one.” Autism Alliance of Michigan was instrumental in helping Ford start their program.

The first speaker of the day was Holly Robinson Peete. She is an actress, singer, reality TV star, husband of NFL player Rodney Peete and the daughter of Matt Robinson (who played Gordon on Sesame Street) and most importantly, the mother of an autistic young man.

Her family life is the subject of a Hallmark TV reality series, “For Peete’s Sake”. She showed some clips from the show, including one in which she reviews pictures of her son from a modeling shoot. He is a striking young man at age 21.

Peete calls the day her son was diagnosed with autism “Never Day”. That was the day she was told her son would never speak to anyone, never get a job, never say, “I love you” to his mother. She then showed us a video, narrated by her son, in which he would say, “The doctors said I would never do _____ “, repeatedly, and ending the sentence with different actions each time but always punctuating with an exclamatory “WRONG” as the video showed him doing the action.

Peete and her family started the HollyRod foundation to support Parkinson’s research because of her father, but later expanded their scope to include autism.

In addition to videos of her son in a modeling shoot, there were those of him working as a bat boy for the LA Dodgers and giving speeches – another thing he was told he would never do, much less speak at all.

She was a very energetic speaker who repeatedly praised the companies there working to hire people on the spectrum. During the Q&A session she was brought to tears by a woman who explained that Peete’s book, “My Brother Charlie,” and work were very inspirational to her family.

Panel discussions started up after that. The first one that I attended was about the first year of employment.

SAP’s Jose Velasco was first to speak, stressing the importance of keeping local partnerships with groups like The Arc, with whom they frequently partner in the cities in which SAP works. Velasco also stressed the importance of teaming with the government vocational rehabilitation programs. He also talked about the crown jewel that ensured the success of the employee for the first year – a support circle that included a job buddy, a mentor inside the company but outside of the immediate job, and a community support buddy outside the company.

Ford Motor Company’s Meeta Huggins was next, explaining their small pilot that resulted in four people being hired. They relied heavily on Autism Alliance of Michigan. Huggins stressed the importance of AAOM’s robust process, in which their staff come in and learn the jobs that the candidates are being interviewed for and suggest improvements and structure to the jobs to accommodate persons on the spectrum.

EY’s Hiren Shukla talked about the geographical variances in setting up their program. There are different NGOs in every different state they operate, and in some cases there are no local NGOs that can help them as The Arc does in other places, so they forge their own path following what they have learned.

Shukla stressed the need to convince the stakeholders in the hiring program to change management and process practices permanently and across the company for all employees because – as if often repeated in these summits – the accommodations that are good for autistic employees are good for all employees, increase morale and job satisfaction, and make better managers and coworkers.

All the panelists spoke about or agreed on this idea and offered examples such as making explicit such information that we assume everyone else knows or can just figure out on their own, such as:
·     Suggesting how to process email queues
·     What company or industry acronyms mean
·     Where to find Information about corporate policies

Each of the panelists also stressed that when vetting candidates, you often don’t get a great resume because of lack of practical experience that we look for in neurotypical people. You might not find an internship, for example. So, you try to draw out of them other examples of what they have done to demonstrate leadership – being an Eagle Scout, for example, or moderating a video game platform.

Two great questions came up during this session. First: What is the right amount of staffing to devote to this? Jose said that at first the program was created with no central leader and run by volunteers helping the recruiters and HR – becoming buddies or mentors. It was not until the program was about a year old that he was selected to be its leader full-time. Ford’s Huggins said she is expected to process this as part of her day job. EY’s Shukla said roughly the same.

Second, Colleen Allen of Autism Alliance of Michigan had more of a statement that ended with a question: You get great talent as a result of the help from all the state agencies and NGOs - what is the corporate responsibility to support these external orgs? Jose Velasco responded that their work helps future communities as well as their companies, but the program was not part of SAP’s corporate social responsibility office, yet.


The second panel of the day was one that I participated in with three ladies, one each from PWC (Tamara Burks) , EY (Teresa Tatum), and Freddie Mac (Sarah Crump). We were to speak about the surprises and trials of just starting a program. We each had different approaches to how we started the program and the model that we used. Some did their own vetting and interview process, IBM used a model that Specialisterne provided with assistance from AAOM that involved a long interview process – four weeks, really. Each of the major companies who sponsored the event do it slightly differently.

What came as a surprise to me was one well-known disabilities advocate and expert telling me that “IBM Japan has an amazing autism hiring program”. While my colleagues and I have spoken to then as recently as last summer, we were unaware of their progress since then, and at this writing I have not heard back from them in my request for information about their program.

One more point that came out of this panel discussion was a question from the schoolmaster at Hilltop Preparatory school in Bryn Mawr, PA. He wanted to know: how do you find the companies that participate in these programs and how do you connect with them? I stated that aside from contacting any of us directly while at the conference, some companies have special portals for persons with disabilities or check boxes that they can hit to ask for accommodations during the interview, or one to click to indicate they are disabled and need accommodations (the latter meaning they disclose their disability). I also implored the crowd – composed largely of schools and NGOs – to start writing to other employers and make their concerns heard.

The last panel of the day was about mentoring the new hires. Microsoft’s Jenn Guadagno explained that in the mentoring culture of Microsoft it was easy to implement a program for new hires with autism. They looked for volunteers and gave them special training on working autistic people, and many have developed strong relationships.

EY’s Jamell Mitchell said that in his organization he tries to change up mentors once in a while to vary the experience of the mentor and the mentee, but often times people who’ve mentored a person on the spectrum want to keep their relationship going.

A good question from the crowd was: what if you have people who are already hired before the program started and they want a buddy? Jenn at Microsoft said they were offered the same option to have a special buddy if they so desired. They would also be asked who could know about their disclosure and how open they wanted to be about it, and their wishes would be respected.

After a few discussions about inappropriate behavior between mentors and mentee, all on the panel agreed that these behaviors should be mitigated carefully and neither should the behavior be blamed on the autism nor should autism be used as an excuse for the behavior; HR policy and performance criteria can apply to all people equally whether they are on the spectrum or not.

After a lunch we gathered all together in one room again and the sponsors of the summit – EY, SAP, Microsoft, and so on – all said goodbye and asked for feedback from the crowd. Many people suggested small improvements or praised the use of captions on screens before the crowd.

The most compelling comment I heard, though, came from two autistic individuals who stood up and asked for more representation by autistic individuals. They both thought that there should be more #actuallyautistic people attending the summits in the future. It echoed John Elder Robison's comments from the two previous summits: “Nothing about us, without us.” This is a great movement but we should not forget that we are trying to serve a community in addition to ourselves, and corporations would do well to get input from the very people they are trying to help. NGOs, state agencies, academics and researchers should, too, but to a lesser extent. We’ve come a long way from merely casting aside autistic people, but we have a long way to go before we better integrate them in school, work and society as our equals, and that must have input from them.
The summit was hosted by Microsoft and sponsored by them, EY, Ford, SAP, JPMC and DXC. As with the two previous summits it was a great way to connect with like-minded people and learn a lot about how to recruit, hire and maintain autistic people. I want to thank Jen Guadagno and Neil Barnett of Microsoft for their hard and impeccable work in putting on this summit and for allowing me to participate in a panel. I hope that IBM and other companies will do more in this movement in the future.






Thursday, April 26, 2018

Day 26: Identity Language

I touched on this in an earlier post so I will try to elaborate a little.

Identity or person first language – some autistic people or parents prefer “identity first” language (I am an autistic person). People who prefer this place the emphasis and even pride on the identity - they are proud of being autistic and view themselves as differently as you or I might because of our hair color, physique, temperament, or other attributes. They feel that their autism is an intrinsic part of their being and identity.

Others prefer “person first” (I am a person with autism). They want people to see that they are a person, first, and that their autism is only a part of their being. They are people who have autism. We could say that I am a person with light skin. I am a person, first, and I happen to have light skin; or that my wife is a person of Italian-American descent - she is first and foremost a human being, and she just happens to be Italian.

There is even a third, nominal way to refer to a person with autism (or an autistic person): an autistic. This also has adherents, who find it empowering as Identity-first language does for others, and detractors who say it objectifies the person. It's equivalent to being called a "blonde" or a "German" - in one case it is a synechdoche, where some part of you is used to name your whole being, and in the latter case you are merely ascribed to a class of people.

Personally, I don't mind either of the first two. I don't see a difference, really. Grammatically, it works out the same. I have red shoes versus I have shoes that are red mean the same thing to me. But saying that I have reds takes on a whole new meaning that not only sounds weird but places an emphasis on just one aspect of a larger thing.

Second Day of Autism at Work Summit

We started the day off with a presentation by Jenny Lay-Flurrie, Chief Accessibility Officer at Microsoft, who spoke at length of the program at Microsoft. Then Dr. Robert Austin introduced the autism hiring managers from several different companies such as SAP, Microsoft, E&Y, JPMC, DXC and Ford. Each company rep spoke of their hiring process for autism hiring or how their existing hiring process has changed to accommodate people on the spectrum. Generally, each company has a screening or first contact, an assessment phase, then a decision to hire. Some companies have special hiring programs where they hire a few people in one shot using specific advertising or sourcing campaigns, others modify their hiring portals and have boxes that candidates can check to indicate they have a disability or that they need accommodations in hiring. In the later case, no one asks what their condition is, but instead the recruiter asks what accommodation is needed. It could be "more time to answer questions" or "I don't look people in the eye"  for a person with autism, or "I need a sign-language interpreter" for a deaf person.

Assessment phases can take a few hours or up to six weeks, depending on the employer, the jobs, the education and experience of the candidates, and the scope of the hiring effort. If a company is looking for people to do manual labor, e.g., the interview might consider of a few hours of task-based evaluations where management and staff review the performance of a candidate. If a company wants to hire people with a desire to be programmers but little practical experience - and perhaps even little traditional education - assessments can be weeks long with individual and team challenges and company-specific task assessments. Candidates in programs like this could earn stipends from the state they live in. Those who are not selected get constructive feedback on why they were not selected, help with resume building, and often a certificate or a line on their resume that says they went through the assessment as training.

A keynote address was given by Nick Walker, managing editor of Autonomous Press. Mr. Walker emphasized that one of the keys to developing the full potential of autistic employees is to look beyond stereotypes that limit our ideas of what these people can do in jobs - do we take the well-meaning but misguided attitude that they are all only good at math or counting tooth picks like Rain Man, or the demeaning attitude that they can only do rote work or worse? These attitudes have been challenged by the aforementioned employers, and hiring mangers are finding that autistic people can do just about anything the rest of us allegedly "normal" people can do - graphic arts, animation, manufacturing, call center work, programming, QA, project management, technical writing, web design, editing...you name it.

The rest of the day built on these ideas and panel speakers from each of these companies and related NGOs or state agencies spoke of their experiences in the process. There were three tracks that the attendees could choose from (see the schedule here and register to watch via livestream here) during each afternoon session - Imagination tracks, in which planning for a hiring program was emphasized and assisted by experienced speakers; Ideation tracks, in which attendees heard from the experiences of first-time practitioners (I will be speaking on one 26th April at 10:30AM PDT); and Collaboration tracks that discussed how to scale operations.

I was unable to attend a good chunk of the afternoon because I had to catch up with my day job, but I was able to join an ideation track about creating accessible interviews, which I detailed in the second paragraph, above.

At the end of the day there was a closing session about the Autism At Work Roundtable. Companies who comprise this roundtable have had at least one year of experience with autism hiring and have agreed to work together to share experiences and best practices. These are companies that are, in some cases, competitors, getting together to collaborate. I can't emphasize this enough - everyone at these events since 2016 feels that strongly about how important this issue is that they feel obligated to evangelize about it. It's a great experience.