Requirements to put in a job description to discourage or filter out autistic people:

* Comfortable with ambiguity
* Strong people skills
* Good culture fit
* Multitasking
* A fast-paced dynamic environment
* Bachelor's degree or better

I see these things and think you don't want my >30 years of programming and machine learning experience, or my problem-solving skills and comprehensive knowledge that had people mistaking me for one of the team's PhDs, or my solutions that have proven patent-worthy. Your loss.

#ActuallyAutistic
@actuallyautistic
@neurodivergence

@actuallyautistic @neurodivergence The degree requirement, in particular, is one I want to highlight. I was a National Merit Scholar, with a free ride to a major, respected university. But I lost my scholarship and ended up homeless for a time because of my (as yet undiagnosed) disability. By the time I got back on my feet, college was no longer an option. But guess what? I kept actively learning on my own, and even pursued my own research agenda in machine learning and NLP. So I don't have the piece of paper you want to see, but I'm a stronger candidate than a lot of folks who *do* have that piece of paper. You'll never know that, because your job description is implicitly ableist in excluding neurodivergent folks who were not a good fit for university -- thanks to ableism there, as well.
@actuallyautistic @neurodivergence My fellow neurodivergent folks, tell me the ableist requirements you've seen in job descriptions. Let's give folks some insight into the stuff that contributes to systemic ableism in the workplace. I know there are way more examples than the few I've already listed.

@hosford42 @actuallyautistic @neurodivergence

Must work well as part of a team.

Any other duties. (So just anything they make up that's not related to the job you were hired to do)

@sentient_water @hosford42 @actuallyautistic @neurodivergence

Well, I dunno, I know a lot of ND folks that work well on Teams (I'm one of them), I kind of feel that can be a bit of a stereotype? or it's a misconception about autistic people

@CarrieHall1001 @hosford42 @actuallyautistic @neurodivergence I did say I can work well with teams. I can't work well with people who are manipulative & abusive though. Even though they're not the majority of people I find I'm often the only one who sees it.

It's very much a Cassandra Complex (but for psychopathology).

@CarrieHall1001 @hosford42 @actuallyautistic @sentient_water @neurodivergence depends on the team. I find daily meetings worse. Scheduled meetings of any kind, as opposed to just informally sync with each other during normal team talk, that is. (This was pre-Corona, pre-homeoffice. I still find daily meetings abhorrent, so I’m preferring to not work in a tightly coupled team that needs syncs this often.)

"Agile" in general. Scrumtology & Co. are a management measure with which a homogenous low-skilled NT team can be made more efficient, but it’s a poison for the creatives and fails with heterogenous skillsets and levels.

@CarrieHall1001 @hosford42 @actuallyautistic @neurodivergence Also please see my toot about generalisations. I hate them, especially when I'm making them. I'm always conscious that no statement applies to ALL.