Willful Steps Guiding Technique &
Philosophy on Neurodiversity
Willful Steps Guiding Technique &
Philosophy on Neurodiversity
1. Our Core Philosophy: The
"Willful Shift"
From Deficit to Design
Willful Steps operates from the neurodiversity
paradigm, not the medical model. We do not "fix" neurodivergent
professionals. We redesign the environments, systems, and expectations that
disable them.
This is grounded in Pellicano & den Houting's (2022) foundational reset: autism science (and by extension, all neurodiversity practice) must shift from "normal science" - which overfocuses on deficits, isolates the individual from context, and narrows perspective - to a paradigm where neurological variation is recognised as natural, valuable, and inseparable from identity.
Our position: Neurodivergence is a way of being, not an appendage to be managed. We do not train people to mask better. We train workplaces to remove the need for masking.
2. Our Guiding Technique:
"Co-Designed Systemic Intervention"
The Three-Layer Model
Every Willful Steps engagement works across
three layers simultaneously, informed by the participatory research and
workplace evidence in our canon:
|
Layer |
What We Do |
Evidence Base |
|
Individual |
Strength-mapping, cognitive accommodation
design, self-advocacy skill-building |
Positive Aspects of ADHD (Paper 17);
Executive function accommodation reviews (Paper 19) |
|
Relational |
Manager/team capability building,
communication system redesign, "double empathy" training |
Double Empathy Problem (Paper 3); Managing
Workplace Neurodiversity (Paper 7) |
|
Structural |
Policy audit, recruitment redesign, sensory
environment assessment, flexible performance metrics |
Buckland Review (Paper 12); CIPD
Neuro-Inclusion Principles (Paper 27); Universal Design for Work (Papers
23–26) |
Why Three Layers?
The Buckland Review (2024) found that the biggest barrier to autistic employment is lack of understanding and negative stereotypes, and that access to reasonable adjustments is inconsistent - with the onus placed on the neurodivergent employee to advocate for themselves. CIPD data shows 31% of neurodivergent employees have not disclosed to their line manager or HR, with 37% fearing stereotyping and 29% fearing career impact.
Our technique: We never deliver "awareness training" alone. Awareness without structural change increases masking burden. We only engage organisations willing to modify systems, not just attitudes.
3. Our Ethical Non-Negotiables
The "Willful Steps Red Lines"
These are derived from the participatory and critical-methodology papers (13–22) that prevent organisations from building bad neurodiversity programs:
|
Red Line |
Rationale |
Source Logic |
|
No "normalisation" goals |
We do not teach social skills to make
neurodivergent people "fit in." We teach workplaces to value
different social communication styles. |
Pellicano & den Houting (2022);
Bottema-Beutel et al. critiques of behavioural intervention |
|
Neurodivergent-led by default |
All workshop design, case studies, and
policy recommendations must be informed by lived experience.
Non-neurodivergent trainers are support, not center. |
Making the Future Together (Paper 13);
Autistic Adults' Priorities for Employment Research (Paper 15) |
|
Disclosure must be optional and safe |
"Inclusion by design" means
adjustments are available without requiring disclosure. Universal design
reduces stigma and protects careers. |
Buckland Review "inclusion by
design" recommendation |
|
Intersectionality is not optional |
Gendered late diagnosis, racial diagnostic
exclusion, and class/access disparities change the experience of
neurodivergence. Our training addresses equity properly or not at all. |
Papers 29–30 |
|
No pseudoscience |
We do not cite or promote biomedical
"cures," applied behaviour analysis for social skills, or
deficit-only framing. |
Critical-methodology papers 20–22 |
4. Our Workshop-Specific Technique:
"Harmony In Diversity" Protocol
(Named for the Forte School engagement, but
applicable across all organisational training)
Phase
1: Pre-Diagnostic (Before We Enter the Room)
●
Organisational
readiness audit using CIPD Neuro-Inclusion benchmarks (Paper 27) and
Neurodiversity Index maturity markers (Paper 28)
●
Stakeholder
mapping: Who has power? Who is neurodivergent and unheard?
●
Commitment
check: Is leadership willing to change recruitment, performance review, or
physical environment? If not, we decline or scope down.
Phase
2: Co-Production (Design With, Not For)
●
Neurodivergent
advisory panel for every major workshop series
●
Participatory
design sessions where neurodivergent employees (if safe to identify) shape
content, not just review it
●
IP protection
for neurodivergent contributors (workbook PDFs, video rights) per established
contract standards
Phase
3: Double Empathy Immersion
Based on Milton's Double Empathy Problem
(Paper 3): communication breakdown is bidirectional, not a one-sided
"social deficit."
Exercises where neurotypical managers
experience cognitive load, sensory overwhelm, and ambiguous instruction—not to
simulate neurodivergence, but to reveal how their norms are constructed and
exclusionary.
Phase
4: System Redesign Sprint
Not "what did you learn?" but
"what will you change by Friday?"
●
Manager-specific
action plans for: flexible deadlines, task chunking, asynchronous
communication, sensory-inclusive environments (Papers 19, 23–26)
●
Accountability
metrics tied to retention, wellbeing, and disclosure safety - not
"productivity" alone
Phase
5: Follow-Through (The Gap Most Trainers Leave)
●
90-day
check-ins
●
Adjustment
Passport support (per Buckland Review recommendation 8)
●
Neurodivergent
employee feedback loop-anonymised, protected, and acted upon
5. Our Position on ADHD Specifically
ADHD is often badly understood in workplace
training (Paper 17). Our approach:
●
Strength-based
first: Hyperfocus, divergent thinking, crisis responsiveness, pattern
recognition
●
Accommodation
as infrastructure, not exception: Cognitive load design, flexible deadlines,
task chunking, async comms (Paper 19)
●
Rejection-sensitive
dysphoria and emotional dysregulation are framed as contextual responses to
invalidating environments, not "symptoms" to manage
●
We cite the
NHS England ADHD Taskforce (Paper 18) for system-level implications, but our
focus is workplace redesign, not clinical intervention
6. Our Position on
"Neurodiversity" vs. "Neurodivergence"
We use neurodivergence to describe individuals whose neurology differs significantly from the societal majority. We use neurodiversity to describe the natural variation of all human brains - including neurotypical people.
Our position:
Neurodiversity is a fact. Neurodivergence is an identity. Neuro-inclusion is a
practice. Willful Steps builds practice.
We align with the social model of disability:
disability is created by physical, social, and attitudinal barriers, not by the
neurodivergent person.
7. Our Measurement of Success
We do not measure success by:
❌
"Awareness scores" (awareness ≠ competence; Paper 11)
❌ Number of
neurodivergent people hired (without retention data)
❌ Employee
"confidence" in managers (without safety to disclose)
We measure success by:
✅ Disclosure
safety index (are people willing to identify without fear?)
✅ Adjustment
quality (are accommodations requested, granted, and well-implemented? Buckland
found >25% refused, >10% poorly implemented)
✅ Masking
reduction (lower exhaustion, anxiety, identity disconnect; Paper on workplace
masking)
✅ Retention
and progression of neurodivergent staff
✅ Manager
capability confidence (not just appreciation; CIPD found only 46% of managers
feel capable)
8. Our Market Position
What We Are
●
A
neurodivergent-led coaching and workshop practice
●
Policy-grade
in our evidence base (we cite systematic reviews, government reviews, and
participatory research)
●
Ahead of most
corporate practice (our canon is 2022–2025, overturning outdated assumptions)
What We Are Not
●
A
"neurodiversity awareness" vendor
●
A provider of
"autism-friendly" one-off sessions with no structural follow-through
●
A
medical-model or deficit-model practice
●
A practice
that treats neurodivergence as a "superpower" (toxic positivity) or a
"burden" (deficit model)
9. One-Sentence Philosophy
Willful Steps believes that neurodivergent professionals do not need to be fixed, trained, or saved—they need workplaces that were never designed for them to be redesigned with them.
10. If You Only Remember Three Things
●
Shift the
system, not the person. (Pellicano & den Houting, 2022)
●
Awareness
without structural change increases masking burden. (CIPD, Buckland, workplace
masking research)
● Nothing about us without us. (Participatory research canon; co-production standards)