According to the CESP Candidate Handbook1, Domain 3 of the CESP certification covers Community Research and Job Development, which includes the following tasks:
3.1 Conduct community research to identify potential employers and employment opportunities that match the job seeker’s employment goals and support needs.
3.2 Develop and maintain relationships with employers and community partners to facilitate job development and placement.
3.3 Negotiate customized employment opportunities that meet the needs and preferences of both the job seeker and the employer.
3.4 Assist the job seeker to prepare for and participate in the hiring process.
The most effective strategy for ensuring that people with disabilities are welcomed into the mainstream of a community’s workforce is to develop a marketing approach that represents people with disabilities in a positive, inclusive manner. This would be consistent with the task 3.2, which requires the employment support professional to develop and maintain relationships with employers and community partners to facilitate job development and placement. By developing a marketing approach that represents people with disabilities in a positive, inclusive manner, the employment support professional would help to raise awareness and change attitudes about the value and potential of people with disabilities as employees, customers, and citizens. This wouldalso help to promote the benefits of diversity and inclusion in the workplace, such as increased productivity, innovation, and customer satisfaction23.
The other options are not the most effective strategies for ensuring that people with disabilities are welcomed into the mainstream of a community’s workforce, because theyeither create or reinforce barriers, stereotypes, or segregation for people with disabilities. Helping employers identify areas of their workplace where employees with disabilities will not interfere with the productivity of other workers (option A) is not an effective strategy, because it implies that people with disabilities are a burden or a problem for the workplace, rather than an asset or a solution. This would also limit the opportunities and choices for people with disabilities, and prevent them from fully participating and contributing to the workplace. Educating employers about the legal requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) (option C) is an important strategy, but it is not the most effective one, because it focuses on the compliance and obligation of employers, rather than the motivation and opportunity of employers. This would also not address the attitudinal and cultural barriers that may exist in the workplace, such as stigma, prejudice, or discrimination. Assisting the community to establish separate training programs for individuals with disabilities to prepare for competitive employment (option D) is not an effective strategy, because it creates segregation and isolation for people with disabilities, rather than integration and inclusion. This would also imply that people with disabilities need special or different training than others, rather than equal or customized training.
References: 1: CESP Candidate Handbook, page 10. 2: Disability and work, ILO, 6. 3: Disability and Employment, United Nations Enable, 5.