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Don’t tell me what to do: Neurodiversity inclusion beyond the occupational typecasting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2023

Ludmila Praslova*
Affiliation:
Vanguard University of Southern California, Costa Mesa, CA, USA
Liana Bernard
Affiliation:
Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA
Stefanie Fox
Affiliation:
Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA
Aviva Legatt
Affiliation:
Ivy Insight Group, LLC, Ardmore, PA, USA
*
Corresponding author. Email: lpraslova@vanguard.edu
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Abstract

Type
Commentaries
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology

LeFevre-Levy et al. (Reference LeFevre-Levy, Melson-Silimon, Harmata, Hulett and Carter2023) identify “environmental niches,” or occupation types best suited for autistic individuals and those with ADHD and dyslexia. Drawing on the existing research and popular media, LeFevre-Levy et al. suggest that autistic individuals are most likely to thrive in technical fields, individuals with ADHD are well suited for entrepreneurship, and creative fields are a good match for those with dyslexia.

Although extremely popular in professional and popular literatures, typecasting individuals into occupations based on specific neurodivergence is problematic. Here, we outline several conceptual issues with assumptions underlying the typecasting and practical implications of this approach. We then provide alternative recommendations for how researchers and practitioners can promote the inclusion of neurodivergent people across industries.

The trouble with typecasting

  1. 1. Typecasting fundamentally contradicts the view of neurodiversity as diversity and reflects the long-standing pathology/deficit perspective (Praslova, Reference Praslova2021b). The question “which jobs are the best for dyslexic people/ADHDers/autistics” is asked by the general public, managers, and reviewers of academic papers. But could this question stem from implicit ableism? Within the neurodivergent community, the test of ableism is substituting another type of diversity in statements and questions about neurodivergent individuals. The substitution test, indeed, reveals the implicit ableism behind typecasting. If neurodiversity is truly approached as diversity, asking “which jobs are most suitable for autistic people” is as limiting and ableist as asking “which jobs are most suitable for women” is limiting and sexist.

  2. 2. Typecasting does not reflect the complexity of neurodivergence. Developmental differences often overlap and co-occur (Brimo et al., Reference Brimo, Dinkler, Gillberg, Lichtenstein, Lundström and Åsberg2021; Pennington, Reference Pennington2006; Rong et al., Reference Rong, Yang, Jin and Wang2021). Stereotypical job fit recommendations may seemingly leave individuals with dual diagnoses or multiple neurodivergent traits without any “suitable careers.” However, such individuals likely have patterns of abilities that the narrow typecasting does not reflect.

  3. 3. Typecasting reflects naturalistic fallacy, a.k.a. “what is observable is good” phenomenon or the leap from what is to what ought to be. Although the existing research and observations may suggest that autistic people succeed in technical fields whereas ADHD and dyslexia are associated with entrepreneurship, such findings and observations reflect career paths constrained and shaped by societal biases. The very stereotype of “autistic tech geeks” constrains access to nontechnical careers. Perpetuating this stereotype is likely to perpetuate unemployment and underemployment among autistic individuals with nontechnical patterns of abilities. Moreover, entrepreneurship rates among neurodivergent individuals likely reflect the lack of employment opportunities and the fact that many workplaces are unwelcoming of neurodivergence (Praslova, Reference Praslova2021b).

The role of environmental effects on neurodivergent populations is also revealed by the research findings indicating that the connection between dyslexia and creativity might be learned rather than innate. Two recent meta-analyses found that dyslexic children and adolescents do not show an advantage in creativity over nondyslexic comparisons, but adults do. This suggests that creativity might be a learned response to unaccommodating environments (Erbeli et al., Reference Erbeli, Peng and Rice2022; Majeed et al. Reference Majeed, Hartanto and Tan2021).

In addition, neurodivergent workers who have chosen nonstereotypical industries often feel the pressure to mask their identities. This may increase their labor and make maintaining employment more difficult. Moreover, the lack of disclosure (along with the lack of diagnosis, especially in older, female, racialized, and economically disadvantaged populations) makes statistics regarding the number of neurodivergent individuals within specific industries unreliable.

  1. 4. Typecasting relies on stereotypes regarding abilities and “deficits” associated with specific neurodivergence. These stereotypes are both limiting and widely inaccurate. For example, contrary to stereotypes, experiments demonstrate that both autistic children and adults show higher levels of verbal creativity on metaphor generations tasks than the nonautistic comparison group (Kasirer et al., Reference Kasirer, Adi-Japha and Mashal2020; Kasirer & Mashal, Reference Kasirer and Mashal2014). Although stereotypical autistic strengths list memory and crystallized intelligence, Hayashi et al. (Reference Hayashi, Kato, Igarashi and Kashima2008) documented that youths diagnosed with Asperger’s performed better than nonautistic controls on measures of fluid intelligence. The limiting steering of autistic individuals toward technical jobs is a great disservice to this population; it has both individual wellbeing and economic costs. Likewise, the expectation that dyslexic individuals demonstrate superior creativity and ADHDers pursue entrepreneurial success is likely to serve as a stressor akin to the academic success pressure placed on Asian American students (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Juon, Martinez, Hsu, Robinson, Bawa and Ma2009).

Alternative recommendations

Rather than steering individuals of certain neurotypes toward specific occupations, researchers could critically examine industries and organizations with higher proportions of neurodivergent employees. These could serve as exemplars demonstrating inclusion strategies that can be implemented elsewhere. Specifically, studies could examine the relative effectiveness of policies, procedures, social norms, and other factors that contribute to more inclusive work environments in particular industries and organizations. Examples of potentially helpful practices include the use of work samples instead of interviews, flexible work organization, careful job matching based on specific assessment of talents, and support for employee advocacy. Inclusive work norms may develop due to the nature of the work or because a higher proportion of neurodivergent employees tend to work and advance to leadership positions in an organization, which influences organizational culture and processes (Praslova, Reference Praslova2022b). Examination of best practices presents a fruitful opportunity to promote the inclusion of neurodivergent employees across industries. Qualitative analyses of neurodivergent people’s lived experiences determining career paths—including barriers faced by unemployed people and those outside of stereotypical industries—are also likely to yield valuable recommendations.

Career guidance practitioners should focus on discovering individual patterns of ability, interests, and values using instruments validated for neurodivergent populations (e.g., Dipeolu, Reference Dipeolu2011; Hayashi et al. Reference Hayashi, Kato, Igarashi and Kashima2008). Multifaceted assessment is essential to helping individuals understand and articulate their strengths for optimal job matching.

An essential tool in supporting neurodiversity inclusion at work is job crafting (Praslova, Reference Praslova2021a). Wrzesniewski et al. (Reference Wrzesniewski, LoBuglio, Dutton, Berg and Bakker2013) stress that job crafting—active employee participation in shaping task, relational, and cognitive components of their jobs to maximize fit, meaning, and engagement—is valuable for all employees. For some neurodivergent employees, it could make a difference between having a career filled with unique contributions and suffering chronic unemployment. “Spiky” ability profiles characteristic of neurodivergent individuals mean that strengths or even notable giftedness in specific cognitive, emotional, or relational areas might be accompanied by a struggle in other areas (Baron-Cohen, Reference Baron-Cohen2020; Grandin, Reference Grandin2013; Milton, Reference Milton2012; Milton et al., Reference Milton, Martin, Melham, Milton and Martin2017). Organizational and manager support for job crafting is essential to neurodiversity and intersectional inclusion in the workplace (Praslova, Reference Praslova2022a). Along with careful job matching, job crafting can further support the person–role fit and occupational success of individuals, as well as team and organizational results.

Finally, organizational practitioners can help integrate neurodiversity as part of diversity efforts across industries and on all levels within organizations. This should include the support for leadership development and advancement of neurodivergent individuals toward leadership roles. This will help reduce stereotyping and promote broad inclusion rather than limited employment in specialized occupational pockets (Praslova, Reference Praslova2021b, 2022a, 2022b; Roberson et al., Reference Roberson, Quigley, Vickers and Bruck2021). Organizations of all types can improve work environments for neurodivergent employees; examining and implementing evidence-supported inclusion strategies should be the foundation of this work.

If our field is to truly embrace neurodiversity as diversity, we must examine whether outdated notions stemming from ableism influence the questions we ask, the science we pursue, and the advice that we give. It is our responsibility to create flexible and intersectionally inclusive workplace environments where individuals with varied patterns of neurodivergent strengths could thrive (Praslova, Reference Praslova2022a). Replacing typecasting with inclusion across industries will liberate neurodivergent individuals to seek employment best aligned with their unique patterns or interests and abilities rather than to be relegated to a stereotypical set of “suitable” occupations.

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