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Microsoft IT

How Microsoft, Dell and Other Large US Employers Accommodate Neurodivergent Employees (nytimes.com) 53

As the number of autism diagnoses rises in America, a number of large employers "are taking steps to make workplaces more accessible and welcoming for neurodivergent employees," reports the New York Times — including Microsoft, Dell and Ford. [Alternate URL here.] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 1 in 36 8-year-olds in the United States has autism. That's up from 1 in 44 in 2018 and 1 in 150 in 2000, an increase that experts attribute, in part, to better screening. In addition, 2.2% of adults in the country, or 5.4 million people, are autistic, according to the CDC...

Autism activists have praised companies that have become more accepting of remote work since the coronavirus pandemic. Workplaces with too much light and noise can overwhelm those who are autistic, leading to burnout, said Jessica Myszak, a clinical psychologist in Chicago who specializes in testing and evaluations for autism. Remote work "reduces the social demands and some of the environmental sensitivities" that autistic people struggle with, Myszak added.

The article notes Microsoft's neurodiversity hiring program, which was established in 2015. The company's program was modeled after a venture created by the German software firm SAP, and has since been adopted in some form by companies including Dell and Ford. The initiative has brought in about 300 full-time neurodivergent employees to Microsoft, said Neil Barnett, the company's director for inclusive hiring and accessibility. "All they needed was this different, more inclusive process," Barnett said, "and once they got into the company, they flourished."

[One job applicant] was given a job coach to help her with time management and prioritization. Microsoft also paired her with a mentor who showed her around the company's campus in Redmond. Perhaps more important, she works with managers who have received neurodiversity training. The Microsoft campus also has "focus rooms," where lights can be dimmed and the heights of desks can be changed to fit sensory preferences. Employees seated in the open office may also request to sit away from busy aisles or receive noise-canceling headphones.

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How Microsoft, Dell and Other Large US Employers Accommodate Neurodivergent Employees

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  • by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @03:47PM (#64625083)

    ...the classic, typical "office environment" drives me up a wall, always has, always will.

    I do'nt care if it's 1950's or 2010's open floor plans, or the 80's - 2000's (and now coming back) cube farms, I loathe them all.

    Noise-cancelling headsets have to rank up there with the most significant inventions of man.

    That it took a pandemic to open the managers / owners / top bosses to even consider letting people work from home is shameful.

    I don't think I'd be a live today had the pandemic not happened. 2020 me was about to have an aneurysm with office life and the commute.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      The pandemic was amazing. I wish we could go back to everyone having lockdown lifestyles. It was so peaceful, traffic was light, shopping was manageable, wearing a mask meant I did not need most of my face to be perceived (which had a relaxing effect and mental calm). Can't wear a mask now because you get perceived *extra hard* by people throwing glares. Traffic is back to sucking at all hours.

      we need a new plague - Dwight Schrute
      • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

        Can't wear a mask now because you get perceived *extra hard* by people throwing glares.

        Parenthetically, that part really gets me.

        I still mask most places, as I've enjoyed not having my 1 - 3 respiratory illnesses a year. And yes, now you get the glares, everyone silently saying "didn't you get the memo? That's not done anymore."

        The masking was never about "the science"; not for 99.99% of people. It was about herd behavior and social signaling.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      or 12, like Elon Musk.

      He didn't start any companies. He co-founded a couple, like X/Paypal early on, but he bought his way into Tesla and SpaceX. He basically bought his way into being a co-founder of Tesla by pushing out another co-founder (they eventually settled, but Tesla was founded without Elon Musk).

      Granted, Elon Musk's money did lubricate a lot of development, but they were companies that Musk invested in more than started.

      • Who did he buy SpaceX from? Don't say Robert Zubrin and his Mars Society, since that still exists and didn't become SpaceX.
  • They put them in out of the way teams and places where they can insulate against the HR problems that inevitably result.

    When one somehow slips through the hiring process and shows up on a team that's actually expected to produce or function under pressure, or one under any kind of public scrutiny, they disappear real quick.

    Saw it happen several times in Microsoft country. The one exception was an old-timer who was such a terrifying savant at manual Assembler optimization that they literally couldn't get rid

  • by TJHook3r ( 4699685 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @04:53PM (#64625151)
    I see, only autistic people find their productivity suffers when they work in a fucking fairground of light and noise!
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I once worked in an office where they had the radio on all day, and a fair bit of banter. Next door was a workshop where they had another radio, on a different station. I thought it would drive me insane, but it actually ended up being okay because my brain could just sort of filter the background noise.

      I also enjoyed a quiet office, at least until my tinnitus came back. Now I have an air purifier on all the time, not least because of the white noise it provides.

      • I find mynoise.net quite useful... a variety of ambient sounds on offer including industrial noise like fans or a server room!
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Thanks. I made some recordings when I was travelling on trains in Japan. Just let the phone record some background noise. Sometimes I use that instead of white noise.

  • Hire people with autism as drivers? I've heard they're excellent [youtube.com].

  • Hell, most of its CEOs were complete psychopaths.

  • I would guess it's cheaper.
  • Can anyone show me someone who is NOT "neurodivergent"? I'll wait.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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