Teenagers With Autism: Want a Job?

New programs aim to keep kids with autism out of institutions

By Nancy Shute

Posted: April 2, 2009

Teenager's legs crossed on the floor.

Autism is growing up. The children diagnosed with the developmental disorder in the 1990s are now teenagers, and they and their parents are starting to wrestle with the question of how they will live as adults. "Unfortunately, I don't think we as a country are ready for that," says Peter Bell, executive vice president for programs and services at Autism Speaks, an advocacy group.

With the rate of autism cases rising from 1 in 2,500 15 years ago to 1 in 150 today, the number of families seeking to map out a secure future for a child with autism can only rise. "We really need to change the paradigm about what people with autism are capable of doing," say Bell, who is just starting to face that question himself. His 16-year-old son has autism and is a freshman in high school. "They generally have some great employable skills that haven't been held to the highest and best use."

Around the country, innovative programs are now offering young people with autism a vital choice-the chance to work, go to college, or even start a business, rather than go on disability and be consigned to a sheltered workshop. There's an economic incentive in this time of strained government budgets; a person with autism costs society about $3.2 million over his or her lifetime, including lost productivity and adult care. Each hour spent collecting a paycheck and not collecting disability lowers that cost. And the personal benefit is incalculable.

The biggest news is an approach called "supportive and customized employment," in which school systems and state vocational rehabilitation programs work together to help teenagers move into the workforce while still in high school. Counselors work with employers to figure out how to make aspects of a disability an asset. "A lot of your obsessive-compulsive behaviors are a real asset on the job," says Wendy Parent, a research associate professor and assistant director at the Kansas University Center for Developmental Disabilities. One young man who liked to push buttons and enjoyed the sound of swishing water, for instance, started a small business washing towels for hair salons. The goal is not to guilt-trip employers into taking special-needs workers but to show how they can be useful. "It's always framed in a business sense. We're not asking for charity. We're saying this person can work for you."

Other new options include:

WESTERN MASS SHOULD HAVE PROGRAM

MAYBE IT DOES, BUT I DON'T KNOW ABOUT IT. YOU SEE, IT'S BEEN A LONG TIME SINCE I "LOST"THEY MY AUTISTIC SON. WELL THE GOVERNMENT SAYS YOU CANNOT LOSE WHAT IS NOT YOURS, BUT THEIRS TO DO AS THEY PLEASE WITH, SO THE LOSS WAS WORSE THAN DEATH WHERE GOD WOULD WATCH OVER HIM AS HE CONTINUED TO "GROW". HE WAS TAKEN FROM A LOVING ENVIRONMENT AS PART OF A FAMILY WHERE HE WAS SOCIALIZED FOR THE FIRST TIME AND WHERE HE ABSOLUTLEY THRIVED!JUST AS A WAY TO SHUT UP A STRONG ADVOCATE AND ADMIRABLE "FOSTER MOM". "WE" AREN'T SUPPOSE TO LOVE THEM OR BECOME ATTACHED , "YOU KNOW THEY AREN'T YOURS".

NOW THAT MY HUSBAND AND I ARE LIVING ON SSDI, (I NEVER EXPECTED TO BE ONE OF THE MANY DISBLED, MY PART WAS TO FIGHT FOR OTHERS!)WE WOULD WELCOME THE OPPORTUNITY TO OFFER A SMALL "PRIVATE LIVING AREA" WHICH WE CONVERTED WHEN MY DAUGHTER GREW UP, OUT, AND THEN CAME BACK SO WE COULD ASSIST WITH OUR GRANDSON WHO WAS A PREEMIE AND HAD MANY DIFFICULTIES IN HIS FIRST FEW BREATHS AND YEARS. HE HAS CP, BUT HE IS THE MOST INTELLIGENT AND COURAGEOUS LITTLE GUY YOU'S EVER MEET! MOST POPULAR KID IN HIS GRADE SCHOOL, NO LESS. YES HE HAS "DIFFERENT ABILITIES", BUT HE HAS THE ATTITUDE THAT THERE IS NOT SOMETHING WRONG WITH HIM...HE IS WHO GOD MEANT HIM TO BE AND HE IS SHOWING ALL HE MEETS WHAT A LITTLE BOY WHO MIGHT NOT HAVE WALKED, TALKED, OR DEVELOPED INTO THE BEAUTIFUL PERSON HE IS IF IT HAD NOT BEEN FOR THE "GRASS ROOTS" PHILOSOPHY HE WAS SURROUNDED WITH AND CONSTANTLY ENCOURAGED TO TRY ANYTHING HE COULD AND WOULD. HE IS 10 NOW.

BUT RECENTLY WE HAVE AN EMPTY NEST ABOVE OUR FIRST FLOOR AND I HAVE THOUGHT MORE AND MORE ABOUT BEING ABLE TO HELP YOUNG ADULTS WITH MENTAL DIFFICULTIES LEAD HAPPY AND PRODUCTIVE LIVES WHILE I THRIVE IN BEING ABLE TO HELP THEM SUCCEED.

I AM IN MY 50'S AND HAVE SECONDARY PROGRESSIVE MS, STILL WALK, RIDE MY HORSE AND FALL DOWN A LOT. MY BRAIN IS SCATTED AT TIMES(ALL THE TIME SOME WOULD SAY) BUT IS ASTUTE IN THE MEDICAL FIELDS I PARACTICED IN AS A PRIVATE CAREGIVER AND AS AN EMT AND ON RESCUE SQUAD.

MUST GO...TIME TO GET READY FOR CHURCH, BUT IF ANYONE KNOWS OF A PROGRAM OR INDIVIDUAL WHO NEEDS A CHANCE TO THRIVE IN A SUPPORTIVE ENVIRONMENT, I KNOW THAT IT WOULD BE WONDERFUL FOR US ALL.

Kathleen Casey of MA @ Apr 19, 2009 09:13:19 AM

atuism doesn't mean I can't

As a working adult with autism who started my own business and has helped my husband start and maintain his (he's not autistic), we have the possibilities that everyone else has. We just opperate differently. Sometimes our differences are big plusses to the "normal" people we work with because we can do many things they can't. Obsesive compulsive secretaries make sure everything is done right the first time and that you stay on time and all of your paperwork is accurate. We also may be slow to learn, but once we do look out because while you have cerebral flatus we never forget. (Just be prepared to have difficulty changing the rules on us.)Just because we're different doesn't mean we can't do things or that you should feel sorry for us, it simply means we have to work harder. My theory is you appreciate more what you work for most.

Tammy of TX @ Apr 09, 2009 12:22:24 PM

Autism and Success

Thanks for bringing attention to the importance of autism, adulthood and employment. Given proper services and supports individuals with autism can be successfully employed. Individuals with autism, families and social service providers have stories to share of individuals with autism who have succeeded. Individuals with autism, who have gained, maintained and advanced their careers. These stories need to be heard so society can raise their expectations of individuals with autism. Given effective support adults with autism contribute to their communities and lead meaningful lives.

Patricia Wright of IL @ Apr 07, 2009 22:08:44 PM

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