Many of us interact with neurodivergent individuals daily. According to the U.S. National Cancer Institute, “an estimated 15-20 percent of the world's population exhibits some form of neurodivergence.” This means some of us may be neurodivergent. Or maybe we are neurotypical but have a neurodivergent family member, friend or team member.
Indeed, many of us may manage neurodiverse teams right now and not realize it. That is, we may have individuals on our teams with a form of dyslexia, autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), a memory processing or mental health condition or some other form of neurodivergence.
The good news is that neurodiversity provides organizations with a competitive advantage. Neurodivergent individuals often excel in innovative thinking, resilience, observational skills, pattern recognition, memory and mathematics.
According to a Harvard Business Review article, companies like SAP, Hewlett-Packard Enterprise and Microsoft have reformed their HR processes to “access neurodiverse talent.” As a result, they “are seeing productivity gains, quality improvement, boosts in innovative capabilities and increased employee engagement.”
The bad news is that many of us may not know how to embrace neurodiversity, support our neurodivergent team members and benefit. I recently participated in a workshop on neurodiversity hosted by the Teaching and Learning Transformation Center at the University of Maryland. Here are tips I learned to support neurodivergence in the classroom and how they may relate to professional work for various healthcare organizations.
Don’t attempt to diagnose or ask for disclosure
Clarify goals
Be flexible
Check personal bias