How Job Interviews Can Hold Back Autistic Jobseekers
BBC News has reported on how job interviews and application forms can create barriers for autistic jobseekers, particularly when questions are ambiguous, processes are rigid, or support needs are not properly considered.
The article looks at findings from a review into autism and employment, as well as experiences from autistic people trying to access work.
Source: BBC News
Original article: “Autistic people held back by job interview questions – report”
Topic: Autism, employment, recruitment, reasonable adjustments
Useful for: Autistic jobseekers, employers, recruiters, HR teams, managers and workplace allies
Why this matters for autistic jobseekers
We chose this article because recruitment is often the first workplace barrier neurodivergent people face.
A person may be capable of doing a job well, but still be disadvantaged by unclear application forms, vague interview questions, unexpected social expectations or a process that rewards confident performance over actual ability.
For autistic jobseekers, practical changes such as clearer questions, advance information, alternative application formats, structured interviews and explicit communication can make a significant difference.
Why we picked this
The article is useful because it moves the discussion beyond whether autistic people “can work” and instead asks whether recruitment processes are designed in ways that allow autistic people to show what they can do.
That distinction matters.
If an employer says they want a neurodiverse workforce but keeps using vague, stressful or inaccessible hiring processes, they may be losing strong candidates before the job has even started.
Key takeaway
Recruitment is part of workplace accessibility.
Reasonable adjustments do not only apply once someone is already employed. They can also matter at the application and interview stage.
For employers, a useful question is:
“Does our hiring process test the skills needed for the job, or does it accidentally test someone’s ability to navigate unclear social expectations?”
For autistic applicants and supporters, this article is a reminder that adjustments can include clearer application forms, interview questions in advance, alternative communication options and more structured recruitment processes.
Read the original article
Read the full article on BBC News:
Autistic people held back by job interview questions – report
