Cheriyan Chinnu, Shevchuk-Hill Sergey, Riccio Ariana, Vincent Jonathan, Kapp Steven K, Cage Eilidh, Dwyer Patrick, Kofner Bella, Attwood Helen, Gillespie-Lynch Kristen
College of Staten Island, The City University of New York, Staten Island, NY, United States.
The Graduate Center, The City University of New York, New York, NY, United States.
Front Psychol. 2021 Oct 14;12:719827. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.719827. eCollection 2021.
Supports for the growing number of autistic university students often focus on helping them succeed in university. However, even educated autistic people experience discrimination and other challenges which can make it very difficult for them to obtain meaningful jobs. Little remains known about how universities can better support their autistic students and alumni in overcoming barriers to meaningful employment. In this participatory study, a team of autistic and non-autistic researchers asked autistic ( = 92) and non-autistic ( = 774) university students about their career aspirations, strengths they believe will help them succeed in their "dream jobs," and obstacles they expect to encounter. Autistic participants' top goal in attending college was to improve their career prospects. However, relatively few autistic students reported learning career-specific skills at university. Autistic students were more likely to seek an academic job and less likely to seek a career in healthcare than non-autistic students. Autistic students highlighted writing skills and detail orientation as strengths that could help them succeed in their dream jobs more often than non-autistic students. However, they were also more likely to expect discrimination, social, and psychological difficulties to stand in the way of their dream jobs. These findings suggest that universities should prioritize experiential learning opportunities to help autistic (and non-autistic) students develop employment-related skills while providing mental health supports. Universities should demonstrate their commitment to supporting diverse learners by seeking out and hiring autistic professionals and by teaching their own staff and employers how to appreciate and support autistic colleagues.
对越来越多的自闭症大学生的支持通常集中在帮助他们在大学取得成功。然而,即使是受过教育的自闭症患者也会遭遇歧视和其他挑战,这可能使他们很难获得有意义的工作。关于大学如何更好地支持自闭症学生及其校友克服有意义就业的障碍,目前所知甚少。在这项参与式研究中,一个由自闭症和非自闭症研究人员组成的团队询问了92名自闭症大学生和774名非自闭症大学生关于他们的职业抱负、他们认为有助于在“理想工作”中取得成功的优势,以及他们预计会遇到的障碍。自闭症参与者上大学的首要目标是改善他们的职业前景。然而,相对较少的自闭症学生表示在大学学到了特定职业技能。与非自闭症学生相比,自闭症学生更有可能寻求学术工作,而在医疗保健领域寻求职业的可能性较小。与非自闭症学生相比,自闭症学生更常强调写作技能和注重细节是有助于他们在理想工作中取得成功的优势。然而,他们也更有可能预计到歧视、社交和心理困难会阻碍他们获得理想工作。这些发现表明,大学应该优先提供体验式学习机会,以帮助自闭症(和非自闭症)学生培养与就业相关的技能,同时提供心理健康支持。大学应该通过寻找和雇佣自闭症专业人员,并教导自己院校的工作人员和雇主如何欣赏和支持自闭症同事,来表明他们支持多样化学习者的承诺。