Module 4 checkpoint
Confirm you can be the kind of peer who writes norms, repairs friction, and notices the small daily signals that make a team somewhere autistic colleagues stay.
You have completed Module 4: If you are a peer of someone autistic. Answer these four questions to confirm your understanding.
Why is the Double Empathy Problem often sharpest at the peer level?
Two peers (at least one autistic) are starting a new collaboration. What's the right first move?
An autistic colleague asks in a project channel: 'why did we decide X?' What's the most useful interpretation?
A peer brings you (the manager) a complaint that an autistic colleague's email 'came across a bit cold'. The work itself was correct and on time. What do you do?
Badge earned
Peer in Practice
You've completed Module 4: If you are a peer of someone autistic. This badge is yours.
Template
Peer Collaboration Norms Worksheet
You've earned access to this template by completing Module 4. Two-person worksheet for writing how you'll work together, signing it, and logging friction when it shows up. Use it at the start of any new collaboration.
Download templateWhere the shapes meet at midcourse
A halfway look at your shape, with autistic colleagues
You took the self-assessment in 1.5. Modules 2 through 4 have given you four working contexts to test the result: team stages, manager 1:1s, manager feedback and accommodations, and now peer collaboration. Read this as a checkpoint, not a verdict.
- ■ Square (Steady Builder): by now you have probably noticed how much an autistic teammate stays for the documented expectation, the standing 1:1, the written norm. Module 2 likely felt natural. Watch Module 3.4 — process can crowd out the specific reasonable adjustment.
- ▲ Triangle (Decisive Driver): Modules 3 and 4 will have surfaced the cost of speed. Clarifying questions read as pushback; silence read as agreement; “let's move” read over an unmade decision. The repair is small: write the call, share the call, name a date.
- ● Circle (Relational Anchor): you have probably been the one teammates come to. The risk by Module 4 is becoming the unpaid translator and the soft landing for every unwritten norm. Move the labor into the norms doc (4.2) and the 1:1 template (3.2).
- ∿ Squiggle (Creative Disruptor): the pairings in Module 4.1 are your strongest lane and your hardest watch-out. The campaign is best when you reframe and then commit. The teammate drains when you keep re-opening the brief.
Bring this read to Module 5 — reporting to an autistic manager will press whichever shape you lead with. Pull your worksheet back out before you start.
Action: Complete all four quiz questions, then slide to finish Module 4 and move to Module 5.