Parent Focus: Putting Work Into the Plan
Try It
The Basics
Work makes life better. If you, as a parent, make work part of your child’s plan now, your child will be much more likely to work as an adult.
Talk about work with your child and your child’s entire support network, including your child’s Individualized Education Program (IEP) team, guidance counselors, teachers, mentors, case managers, family members, and friends. They all need to know that work is in your child’s future.
Together, you can be a team with a shared vision, exploring options, developing skills, and looking for job opportunities for your child.
Having a job early is one of the best ways to build future employment success. It could be a part-time weekend gig or a summer job. Any job where your child is making minimum wage or better is a good start.
A job offers real work experience and employers are especially patient with young employees; they know that a first job is how a young person learns what work is all about.
If anybody says that your child can’t or shouldn’t work, show them DB101’s article about why Work Is Possible.
Learn more
Parent Focus: Work is Possible
A disability shouldn't stop your child from working.
Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
Learn how benefits and a job can work together for your child.
Parent Focus: Turning 18
How benefits change when your child becomes an adult.
Give Feedback