Practical
Tips to Help Your Employee with Asperger Syndrome Get Established in Your
Office
By Ellen Mossman- Glazer M.Ed. Life
Skills Coach, Behavior Specialist.
You have just hired someone who has Asperger Syndrome, or perhaps you
suspect so, and indeed he or she has very strong skills to match the job
description. It is likely that you will be very pleased because people
with Asperger Syndrome tend to have strong focus and commitment to a job
well done.
To
set up for office place success, you will find it pays off to invest in
some training time, early on in some of those skills unrelated to the
primary job, but fundamentally important to navigating the day at the
office.
Here
are seven straightforward strategies to help your new employee prosper
and produce for your business.
1.
Logical lists. As you see a routine or task that requires daily attention,
log it on a list. Explaining the purpose behind the task may help it to
become automatic. People with Asperger Syndrome like to make sense out
of things.
2.
Create a cheat sheet for phone coverage. If want your
employee to pinch hit on the phones, have a few generic phrases that work
for your workplace, for example, Can I have someone get back to
you with that information?
3.
Be very specific about what you expect in general office matters.
Help her to know where more and less flexibility is in order and appropriate
in the daily flow of the work place. What routines must be done one way
only? Observe, make notes and plan for periodic feedback time.
4.
Be prepared to give your input with some of the smaller steps you may
not typically think of stating. Gradually transfer responsibility
and accountability to your employee, withdrawing your level of involvement
as you see him catching on to the rhythms of your office place.
5.
Help her become comfortable with the social culture of your workplace.
People with Asperger tend to want to stay focused on tasks they enjoy.
Being specific about when to go for breaks and lunch will be a guide for
opportunities to personally connect with co-workers.
6.
Have a set routine for evaluation and feedback sessions. Start the
meeting by talking about the qualities you see in your new employee. Heres
where your work is very well done. Be sensitive to feelings of past
failure with social and organizational issues. Your employee with Asperger
is probably quite familiar with his weaknesses, having heard about them
and struggled with them in some other past setting. You can say
Heres where we will work together:
7.
Dont be afraid to be blunt. It will be helpful. There is a distinction
between blunt and rude. He will appreciate and
understand directness and clarity. If you are finding yourself repeating
requests, you can say, What plan can we come up with to help you
establish routines that I have been reminding you about?
For
more tips and tools to help people with Asperger Syndrome in the work
place see companion article Communication Tips to Help Your Employee
with Asperger Syndrome Thrive in Your Work Place
Copyright Ellen Mossman-Glazer
2005. All rights reserved. You are welcome to share or reprint this article,
providing it remains as written with all contact and copyright information
included along with a link to http://artofbehaviorchange.com
This content is coaching and education and not intended to take the place
of psychological services, where advised and appropriate.
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