Anonymous wrote:My sister has low iq. She prepares shipments for distribution. It’s repetitive and physically hard, but she doesn’t need to make any quick decisions.
She is not in a sheltered workplace, but another relative was and he did quality control on garments. Very slow pace with an emphasis on being accurate rather than getting through a certain number of pieces per shift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are specialized nonprofits that counsel and place adults with autism.
I've received cold e-mail inquiries from one such non-profit. Don't have the name handy.
Anyway, their websites may have thoughtstarters.
least helpful reply ever on dcum
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Service jobs are the WORST for low processing speed. Ideally, they need to get hired for jobs where speed isn't of the essence, and when they graduate college, for their competencies in their area of expertise.
My husband has a high IQ, ADHD/HFA and processing speed issues. He has an MD, a PhD and Master's degrees in stats and comp. science fields. He works in a multidisciplinary branch of research that very few people can do. He did poorly in all the manual service jobs he held as a teen. On the first day of his shift as a delivery driver, he crashed the van.
My ADHD/HFA son tested at the 4th percentile for processing speed when he was in elementary. He has extended time even in college! He's shaping to become a version of his father, but in military strategy/national security/applied data science fields. He'll be a knowledgeable, thoughtful and painstaking analyst someday. US security will be in good hands with people like him. He walked dogs for neighbors as a teen and worked as a camp counselor, which worked out fine. No service jobs, he'd fail miserably.
I have low processing speed too, but not as severe as my son. I'm a research biologist. I worked in a pharmacy as a teen, and immeasurably preferred helping the compounding pharmacist at the back, rather than being at the cashier end, where customers stressed me out and I got so muddled.
There's hope, OP!
Thank you for sharing. I have an ADHD kid with low processing speed who scores high in math but struggles in any subject that requires nontechnical reading. This gives me hope.
I have ADHD and low processing speed, and I've done well in the law. I've always sought out great paralegals and am an early adopter of AI assistant technology. I loved policy debate, which is very high-speed and requires intense focus. My ADHD kid loves chess, including speed chess. Processing speed is only an issue if you're having trouble engaging in a subject.
Anonymous wrote:Service jobs are the WORST for low processing speed. Ideally, they need to get hired for jobs where speed isn't of the essence, and when they graduate college, for their competencies in their area of expertise.
My husband has a high IQ, ADHD/HFA and processing speed issues. He has an MD, a PhD and Master's degrees in stats and comp. science fields. He works in a multidisciplinary branch of research that very few people can do. He did poorly in all the manual service jobs he held as a teen. On the first day of his shift as a delivery driver, he crashed the van.
My ADHD/HFA son tested at the 4th percentile for processing speed when he was in elementary. He has extended time even in college! He's shaping to become a version of his father, but in military strategy/national security/applied data science fields. He'll be a knowledgeable, thoughtful and painstaking analyst someday. US security will be in good hands with people like him. He walked dogs for neighbors as a teen and worked as a camp counselor, which worked out fine. No service jobs, he'd fail miserably.
I have low processing speed too, but not as severe as my son. I'm a research biologist. I worked in a pharmacy as a teen, and immeasurably preferred helping the compounding pharmacist at the back, rather than being at the cashier end, where customers stressed me out and I got so muddled.
There's hope, OP!
Anonymous wrote:There are specialized nonprofits that counsel and place adults with autism.
I've received cold e-mail inquiries from one such non-profit. Don't have the name handy.
Anyway, their websites may have thoughtstarters.