Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is he on LinkedIn? He really should be there networking and looking for jobs. It takes time, but he will find a job. Cover letters are not needed for tech jobs.
Thank you! that's good to know! I'll stop urging him to write cover letters!
He is on LinkedIn, but not really using it to look for a job, as far as I can tell. Networking? I don't think he has any idea how to network, and he won't listen to me. Getting him an interviewing coach would help, as maybe he'd listen to them. But getting him there...?? How to do this? He doesn't even accept that he has any kind of disability, which clearly he does!
Anonymous wrote:He may be socially immature but he also sounds arrogant and rude to you, frankly. How about he having to have an interview skills etc coach and join a gym or whatever in s gangs for you NOT charging rent. He needs to know that his high aIQ doesn’t make up for his almost willful lack of EQ.
Anonymous wrote:Is he on LinkedIn? He really should be there networking and looking for jobs. It takes time, but he will find a job. Cover letters are not needed for tech jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Any chance he can get back on the PhD track?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was the MS in? What type of job is he seeking? Has he applied for any Federal jobs?
Not sure if I can comment since I don't have a kid with ASD but an ASD spouse. Second the idea for a fed job. Promotions are fairly rote and not based primarily on soft skills/ socialization
If your DS is open to it, you can do what my MIL did and get very active in his romantic life and marry him off
Ha ha. I offered to buy him a subscription to match.com (as a joke), but he said no!! He goes on Tinder and Hinge to find dates, but only goes out a few times and the girls never call him back. I'd love for him to find a long-term girlfriend!!! All the females in his grad program are too sophisticated for him. He said none of them wanted to get married! They're only interested in their careers, he claims. This is autism speaking, IMHO.
I'll see if DH will walk him through applying for a fed job. That's a great suggestion. And he might feel comfortable in a less pressured place where there are other STEM types like him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was the MS in? What type of job is he seeking? Has he applied for any Federal jobs?
Not sure if I can comment since I don't have a kid with ASD but an ASD spouse. Second the idea for a fed job. Promotions are fairly rote and not based primarily on soft skills/ socialization
If your DS is open to it, you can do what my MIL did and get very active in his romantic life and marry him off
Anonymous wrote:You can find him a jobs coach where he can practice the art of interviewing. I would start looking at some of the autism organizations that may have programs to help with this. Sometimes the local ARCs have things too and anyone can participate. This article may help you start the search: https://daivergent.com/blog/companies-that-hire-autistic-adults
You may have to act as his job counselor at first and do some of the front end stuff for/with him.
My child with ASD was able to get a job after an college internship. He may have had a similar experience as your son as he went on several other interviews but received no other offers- just the one from the people that knew him from his internship. I do not think he interviewed well otherwise. He was a computer engineering major and ASD is somewhat of a stereotype for that major.
Anonymous wrote:What was the MS in? What type of job is he seeking? Has he applied for any Federal jobs?